Misplaced Pages

Yakuza: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 02:56, 31 May 2007 edit164.107.223.217 (talk) Current activities← Previous edit Latest revision as of 09:58, 8 January 2025 edit undo2601:5cc:4181:1650:8e35:1c98:56f5:74bf (talk) Constituent members: Fixed typo ("yauza" to "yakuza")Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Otheruses1|organized crime}} {{Short description|Members of organized crime syndicates in Japan}}
{{Italic title|reason=]}}
{{Other uses}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}
{{Infobox criminal organization
| name = ''Yakuza''
| image = ]
| image_size =
| caption = The word yakuza in ] (ヤクザ)
| founded = 17th century<br/>(presumed to have originated from the {{Lang|ja-latn|]}})
| ethnic makeup = Primarily ]; occasionally ] and ]
| membership = {{formatnum:10400}} members<ref name="npa">{{cite web|url=https://www.npa.go.jp/sosikihanzai/R05sotaijousei/r5jousei.pdf|title=Organized Crime Situation 2023|pages=2–6, 26|website=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240330010050/https://www.npa.go.jp/sosikihanzai/R05sotaijousei/r5jousei.pdf|accessdate=30 March 2024|archive-date=30 March 2024}}</ref><br>{{formatnum:10000}} quasi-members<ref name="npa"/>
| territory = Primarily Japan, particularly in ]/], ], ]/], and ]; also internationally in South Korea, Australia,<ref>{{cite web | url=https://irp.fas.org/world/australia/docs/ncaaoc4.html | title=Japanese Organised Crime in Australia }}</ref> the ] (] and ]), and ] (])
| activities = Varied, including illegitimate businesses, an array of criminal and non-criminal activities.
| notable_members = Principal clans:
# ]
# ]
# ]
}}


{{Nihongo|2=ヤクザ|3='''Yakuza'''|4={{IPA|ja|jaꜜkɯdza|IPA}}; {{IPAc-en|lang|j|ə|'|k|uː|z|ə|,_|'|j|æ|k|uː|z|ə}}|lead=yes}}, also known as {{Nihongo|2=極道|3='''gokudō'''|4="the extreme path", {{IPA|ja|gokɯꜜdoː|IPA}}}}, are members of transnational ] originating in Japan. The ] and media (by request of the police) call them {{nihongo|2=暴力団|3='''bōryokudan'''|4="violent groups", {{IPA|ja|boːɾʲokɯꜜdaɴ|IPA}}}}, while the yakuza call themselves {{nihongo|2=任侠団体|3='''ninkyō dantai'''|4="chivalrous organizations", {{IPA|ja|ɲiŋkʲoː dantai|IPA}}}}. The English equivalent for the term ''yakuza'' is ], meaning an individual involved in a ]-like criminal organization.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Britannica Academic |url=https://academic.eb.com/?target=%2Flevels%2Fcollegiate%2Farticle%2Fyakuza%2F77739 |access-date=2024-07-01 |website=academic.eb.com}}</ref>
]
] are a popular modern Tokyo Yakuza hangout.]]
] openly ban certain Yakuza groups from entering.]]
{{nihongo|'''Yakuza'''|ヤクザ or やくざ }}, also known as '''''gokudō''''' (極道), are members of traditional ] groups in ]. Outside of Japan, the term also refers to traditional Japanese organized crime in general. Today, the yakuza are one of the largest organized crime phenomena in the world.


The yakuza are known for their strict codes of conduct, their organized ]dom nature, and several unconventional ritual practices such as '']'', or amputation of the left little finger.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bosmia |first1=Anand N. | last2=Griessenauer|first2=Christoph J.|last3=Tubbs|first3=R. Shane|title=Yubitsume: ritualistic self-amputation of proximal digits among the Yakuza|journal=Journal of Injury and Violence Research |year=2014 |volume=6 |issue=2 |pages=54–56 |doi=10.5249/jivr.v6i2.489 |pmid=24284812|pmc=4009169}}</ref> Members are often portrayed as males with heavily tattooed bodies and wearing ], sometimes with a ] or, in more recent years, a Western-style "sharp" suit covering them.<ref>{{cite magazine|id={{Gale|A194486438}}|title=Feeling the Heat; The Yakuza |magazine=] |volume=390 |issue=8620 |date=28 February 2009}}</ref>
In Japanese legal terminology, yakuza organizations are referred to as '']'', literally "violence groups". Yakuza members consider this an insult, as ''bōryokudan'' is a term which can be applied to any violent criminal. In the Western press they are sometimes called the "Japanese ]", by analogy with other traditionally Italian-Sicilian organized crime groups of the same name. For a list of present and past yakuza gangs, see the ] page.
At their height, the yakuza maintained a large presence in the ], and they also ]. In 1963, the number of yakuza members and quasi-members reached a peak of 184,100.<ref name="npa99">. National Police Agency. 1999.</ref> However, this number has drastically dropped, a decline attributed to changing market opportunities and ] in Japan that discourage the growth of yakuza membership.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Hill|first1=Peter|title=The Changing Face of the Yakuza|journal=Global Crime|date=February 2004|volume=6|issue=1|pages= 97–116| doi=10.1080/1744057042000297007|s2cid=153495517}}</ref> In 1991, it had 63,800 members and 27,200 quasi-members, but by 2023 it had only 10,400 members and 10,000 quasi-members.<ref name="npa"/> The yakuza are aging because young people do not readily join, and their average age at the end of 2022 was 54.2 years: 5.4% in their 20s, 12.9% in their 30s, 26.3% in their 40s, 30.8% in their 50s, 12.5% in their 60s, and 11.6% in their 70s or older, with more than half of the members in their 50s or older.<ref>. '']''. 27 March 2023.</ref>


The yakuza still regularly engage in an array of criminal activities, and many Japanese citizens remain fearful of the threat these individuals pose to their safety.<ref name=Shikata2006>{{cite journal|last1=Shikata|first1=Ko|title=Yakuza – organized crime in Japan|journal=Journal of Money Laundering Control|date=October 2006|volume=9|issue=4|pages=416–421|id={{ProQuest|235850419}}|doi=10.1108/13685200610707653}}</ref> There remains no strict prohibition on yakuza membership in Japan today, although many pieces of legislation have been passed by the ] aimed at impeding revenue and increasing liability for criminal activities.<ref name=Shikata2006/>
== Origin and history ==
The term "Yakuza" comes from a Japanese ], ] (played with ] or ] cards), and means "good for nothing". Similar to ], the values of the cards are added together and the last digit of the sum is taken as the score. The worst ] in the game is a set of eight, nine and three, which gives a sum of 20 and a score of 0. In traditional Japanese forms of counting, these numbers are called ''Ya'' (8), ''Ku'' (9) and ''Sa'' (3) respectively, thus the origin of the word "yakuza". The yakuza took this name because the Ya-Ku-Za hand requires the most skill (at judging opponents, etc.) and, obviously, the least luck in order to win (i.e., only an expert could have enough talent to counteract his bad luck and still win with such a hand.) The name was also used because it signified bad fortune, presumably for anyone who went up against the group.


== Etymology ==
In modern Japanese counting, eight, nine and three could be pronounced "''hachi-kyu-san''," a name by which the yakuza are sometimes called in Japan today.{{fact}}
The name ''yakuza'' originates from the traditional Japanese card game '']'', a game in which the goal is to draw three cards adding up to a score of 9. If the sum of the cards is 10 or more, the second digit is the score. So a sum of 13 is a score of 3, a sum of 14 is a score of 4, etc. A sum of 10 or 20 is a score of 0. If the three cards drawn are 8-9-3 (pronounced '''ya-ku-za''' in archaic Japanese), the sum is 20 and therefore the score is zero, making one of the worst possible hands that can be drawn.<ref>{{cite magazine |last1=Hessler |first1=Peter |title=All Due Respect |url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2012/01/09/all-due-respect |access-date=19 April 2022 |magazine=The New Yorker |date=2 January 2012|quote=The name refers to an unlucky hand at cards—yakuza means "eight-nine-three"—and bluffing has always been part of the image. Many gangsters are Korean-Japanese or members of other minority groups that traditionally have been scorned.}}</ref><ref>. Kotobank (in Japanese)</ref> In ], the word ''yakuza'' is commonly written in ] (ヤクザ).


== Origins ==
There is no single origin for all Japanese yakuza organizations. Rather, yakuza organizations developed from different elements of traditional Japanese society. In the later part of the Japanese ] era, especially in the ] (1603-1867), the legal power of the feudal lords shifted away from direct ownership of land to a broader feudal tax system based on land "products", with ] being the predominant example. Also, ] retainers began to be paid with rice, which they sold to markets for cash, instead of being paid a direct salary. The samurai provided service as professional soldiers during wartime and as professional bureaucrats or administrators during peacetime. During the Edo period, most samurai lost their connection to the land and started to live around the feudal castles.
]
] (Chogoro Yamamoto)]]
Despite uncertainty about the single origin of yakuza organizations, most modern yakuza derive from two social classifications which emerged in the mid-] (1603–1868): '']'', those who primarily peddled ], stolen or shoddy goods; and '']'', those who were involved in or participated in ].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Dubro|first1=A.|last2=Kaplan|first2=David E.|title=Yakuza: The Explosive Account of Japan's Criminal Underworld|date=1986|publisher=Da Capo Press|isbn=978-0-201-11151-4|pages=18–21}}</ref>


''Tekiya'' (peddlers) ranked as one of the ] during the Edo period. As they began to form organizations of their own, they took over some administrative duties relating to commerce, such as stall allocation and protection of their commercial activities.<ref>Joy, Alicia. "A Brief History of the Yakuza Organization". Culture Trip. Last modified 31 October 2016. https://theculturetrip.com/asia/japan/articles/a-brief-history-of-the-yakuza-organization/ {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181001070204/https://theculturetrip.com/asia/japan/articles/a-brief-history-of-the-yakuza-organization/ |date=1 October 2018 }}.</ref> During ] ], these peddlers opened stalls and some members were hired to act as security. Each peddler paid rent in exchange for a stall assignment and ] during the fair.
Around the same time, the ] of the community became the responsibility of members of the community, rather than the ] (lord). This was especially prevalent outside of the capital cities, as the ] government allowed only one major ] in each feudal ].


The ''tekiya'' were a highly structured and hierarchical group with the ''oyabun'' (boss) at the top and ''kobun'' (gang members) at the bottom.<ref name="kyotojournal.org">Raz, Jacob. "Insider Outsider: The Way of the Yakuza." Kyoto Journal. Last modified 17 April 2011. https://kyotojournal.org/society/insider-outsider/.</ref> This hierarchy resembles a structure similar to the family – in traditional ], the ''oyabun'' was often regarded as a surrogate father, and the ''kobun'' as surrogate children.<ref name="kyotojournal.org"/> During the Edo period, the government formally recognized the ''tekiya''. At this time, within the ''tekiya'', the ''oyabun'' were appointed as supervisors and granted near-] status, meaning they were allowed the dignity of a surname and two swords.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Dubro |first1=A. |last2=Kaplan |first2=David E. |title=Yakuza: The Explosive Account of Japan's Criminal Underworld |date=1986 |publisher=Da Capo Press |isbn=978-0-201-11151-4 |page=22 }}</ref>
Although the yakuza often insist on their origins as Japanese "]s" and protectors, some scholars trace their beginnings to the '']'' (raving ones), also known as '']'' (servants of the shogun). These groups of '']'' (masterless samurai) adopted strange hair styles, dressed in an outrageous manner, spoke in vulgar and specialized slang, carried unusually long swords and harassed ordinary people. Their exploits are still a popular subject of Japanese ] dramas based on the feudal era.


''Bakuto'' (gamblers) had a much lower social standing even than traders, as gambling was illegal. Many small gambling houses cropped up in abandoned temples or shrines at the edges of towns and villages all over Japan. Most of these gambling houses ran ] businesses for clients, and they usually maintained their own security personnel. Society at large regarded the gambling houses themselves, as well as the ''bakuto'', with disdain. Much of the undesirable image of the yakuza originates from ''bakuto''; this includes the name ''yakuza'' itself.
Some yakuza do, however, trace their origins to the communal vigilante/police groups known as '']'' ("Servants of the town") that arose to enforce order and protect the community from intruders. These groups varied in their level of organization and formality, often simply being comprised of labourers and other "tough men" of the community. Sometimes they also included one or more ronin, as only samurai were officially allowed to carry swords. They often fought against bandits and gangs to protect their community and were even regarded as heroes.


Because of the economic situation during the mid-Edo period and the predominance of the merchant class, developing yakuza groups were composed of misfits and delinquents who had joined or formed the groups to extort customers in local markets by selling fake or shoddy goods.{{Clarify|What "mid-period"? How gone from privileged merchants with swords to misfits? How did tekiya and bakuto come together?|date= March 2016}}
In larger towns, several of these groups often existed simultaneously, and they often fought for territory, money and influence much like modern gangs, disregarding any civilians caught in the crossfire. Again, this is the origin of a popular theme of Japanese film and television, made famous in the ] by an ] ] called '']'' in which a wandering ronin sets two such gangs against each other and eventually destroys them. Yakuza derived some practices from both machi-yakko and kabukimono. Their protection rackets can be seen as originating from machi-yakko, but their more colorful fashion and language are derived from the kabukimono tradition.


] (1820–1893) is Japan's most famous yakuza and folk hero.<ref>{{cite book |title=Yakuza: Japan's Criminal Underworld |last1=Kaplan |first1=David E.|last2=Dubro |first2=Alec |year= 2012|publisher=the University of California Press |isbn= 978-0520215627|edition=25th Anniversary }}</ref> He was born Chogoro Yamamoto, but changed his name when he was adopted, a common Japanese practice.<ref name="jirocho">{{cite web |title=Portraits of Modern Japanese Historical Figures |publisher= National Diet Library, Japan |date=May 22, 2007 |url=https://www.ndl.go.jp/portrait/e/datas/278.html |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20190722171934/https://www.ndl.go.jp/portrait/e/datas/278.html |archive-date=July 22, 2019}}</ref> His life and exploits were featured in sixteen films between 1911 and 1940.
===Tekiya and Bakuto===
More directly, the origin of most modern yakuza organizations can be traced to two groups which emerged in 18th century Japan: ] (peddlers) and ] (gamblers). These roots can be seen in current yakuza ], which incorporate either tekiya or bakuto ]. Although the modern yakuza has diversified, some gangs still identify with one group or the other. For example, a gang whose primary source of income is illegal gambling may refer to themselves as bakuto.


The roots of the yakuza survive today in ], which incorporate tekiya or bakuto ]. Although the modern Yakuza has diversified, some gangs still identify with one group or the other; for example, a gang whose primary source of income is illegal gambling may refer to themselves as ''bakuto''.
Tekiya (peddlers) were considered one of the lowest of Edo castes. As they began to form organizations of their own, they took over some administrative duties relating to commerce, such as stall allocation and protection of their commercial activities. For example, during Shinto festivals, these peddlers opened stalls and some members were hired to act as security. Each peddler paid rent in exchange for a stall assignment and protection during the fair. The Edo government eventually formally recognized such tekiya organizations and granted the "oyabun" (servants) of tekiya a surname as well as permission to carry a sword. This was a major step forward for the traders, as formerly only samurai and noblemen were allowed to carry swords.


===Kyushu===
Bakuto (gamblers) had a much lower social standing even than traders, as gambling was completely illegal. Many small gambling houses cropped up in abandoned temples or shrines at the edge of towns and villages all over Japan. Most of these gambling houses ran loan sharking businesses for clients, and they usually maintained their own security personnel. The places themselves, as well as the bakuto, were regarded with disdain by the society at large, and much of the undesirable image of the yakuza originates from bakuto. This includes the name "yakuza" itself.
], a well-known source of many yakuza members]]
The island of ] (and particularly its northern prefecture ]) has a reputation for being a large source of yakuza members,<ref name="JapaneseJusticeJohnson2002">{{cite book |last1=Johnson |first1=David T. |title=The Japanese way of justice: prosecuting crime in Japan |date=2002 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford ; New York |isbn=9780195119862 }}</ref> including many renowned bosses in the ].<ref name="Baradel 2021 pp. 74–91">{{cite journal | last=Baradel | first=Martina | title=Yakuza Grey: The Shrinking of the Il/legal Nexus and its Repercussions on Japanese Organised Crime | journal=Global Crime | volume=22 | issue=1 | date=2021-01-02 | issn=1744-0572 | doi=10.1080/17440572.2020.1813114 | pages=74–91}}</ref> Isokichi Yoshida (1867–1936) from the ] area was considered by some scholars and political watchers as one of the first renowned modern yakuza.<ref name="Siniawer 2012 pp. 623–641">{{cite journal | last=Siniawer | first=E. M. | title=Befitting Bedfellows: Yakuza and the State in Modern Japan | journal=Journal of Social History | volume=45 | issue=3 | date=2012-03-01 | issn=0022-4529 | doi=10.1093/jsh/shr120 | pages=623–641}}</ref> Recently ] and Kunio Inoue, the bosses of the two most powerful clans in the Yamaguchi-gumi, originate from Kyushu. ], the northernmost part of the island, has the largest number of ] among all of the prefectures.<ref>{{cite news |last1=High concentration of |first1=Yakuza within Fukuoka |title=Fukuoka to offer financial help for gangsters trying to leave crime syndicates |url=https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2018/02/20/national/crime-legal/fukuoka-offer-financial-help-gangsters-trying-leave-crime-syndicates/ |access-date=30 August 2022 |agency=www.japantimes.co.jp |date=February 20, 2018}}</ref>


== Organization and activities ==
===Post-War Yakuza: Gurentai===
As Japan began to industrialize and ] got underway, a third group of yakuza called '']'' (愚連隊) began to emerge (though the name gurentai was not given until after ]). Whether they fall into the traditional definition of yakuza is still open to debate, but they certainly gave birth to another kind of yakuza, the ] (violence group). In short, a gurentai is a gang in a much more traditional sense, a group of young unruly thugs who peddle their violence for profit. They often engaged in the suppression of ] and other workers' organizations and such activities brought them much closer to the conservative elements of the Japanese power structure. During the ] of Japan, some of them became the militant wing of Japanese politics known as ] (], 右翼), i.e. ultra-nationalists.


=== Structure ===
Unlike more traditional yakuza, uyoku did not maintain territories—they leveraged their violence for political gain. The most famous group before World War II was the ] (黒龍会), or Black Dragon Society. The Kokuryu-kai was a secret ultra-nationalist ] whose membership was comprised of government officials and military officers as well as many martial artists and members of the Japanese underworld who engaged in political ] and assassination. They also provided espionage services for the Japanese ]. Kokuryū-kai engaged in contraband operations including the ] ] trade, as well as prostitution and gambling overseas which provided them with funds as well as information.
]
]
During the formation of the yakuza, they adopted the traditional Japanese hierarchical structure of oyabun-kobun where ''kobun'' (子分; lit. foster child) owe their allegiance to the {{nihongo|''oyabun''|親分||lit. foster parent}}. In a much later period, the code of {{nihongo|''jingi''|仁義||justice and duty}} was developed where loyalty and respect are a way of life. The oyabun-kobun relationship is formalized by ceremonial sharing of ] from a single cup. This ritual is not exclusive to the yakuza – it is also commonly performed in traditional Japanese ] weddings, and may have been a part of sworn brotherhood relationships.<ref name="trutv.com">{{cite web|last=Bruno|first=Anthony|title=The Yakuza – Oyabun-Kobun, Father-Child|url=http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/gangsters_outlaws/gang/yakuza/2.html|publisher=]|access-date=28 February 2012}}</ref>


The structure of yakuza organizations is characterized by a multi-layered hierarchical structure. The {{nihongo3|pseudo child||kobun}} of an organization become {{nihongo3|family head and pseudo parent||oyabun}} and run their own subsidiary organizations, and the ''kobun'' of the subsidiary organizations also become ''oyabun'' and run their own subsidiary organizations. A large yakuza organization such as ] is made up of five or six layered organizations.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npa.go.jp/hakusyo/h01/h010102.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230708062115/https://www.npa.go.jp/hakusyo/h01/h010102.html|script-title=ja:第2節 暴力団の構造と活動|language=ja|publisher=National police Agency|date=|archive-date=8 July 2023|access-date=12 May 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://president.jp/articles/-/9722?page=1|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211026123712/https://president.jp/articles/-/9722?page=1|script-title=ja:開拓した会社がヤクザのフロント企業だったら|language=ja|publisher=President Online|date=19 June 2013|archive-date=26 October 2021|access-date=12 May 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://friday.kodansha.co.jp/article/251723?page=1|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240512123217/https://friday.kodansha.co.jp/article/251723?page=1|script-title=ja:駅に初詣、出所…山口組司忍組長ら暴力団が報道写真に納まるワケ|language=ja|publisher=]|date=2 July 2022|archive-date=12 May 2024|access-date=12 May 2024}}</ref> In other words, the heads of subsidiary organizations are often executives of the parent organizations.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npa.go.jp/hakusyo/h27/honbun/html/rf121000.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230323145720/https://www.npa.go.jp/hakusyo/h27/honbun/html/rf121000.html|script-title=ja:第2節 暴力団の構造と活動|language=ja|publisher=National police Agency|date=|archive-date=23 March 2023|access-date=12 May 2024}}</ref>
During the post-War rationing, the yakuza controlled the ] much in line with traditional tekiya operations. At the same time, they also moved into controlling major sea ports as well as the entertainment industry. The biggest yakuza umbrella group, the ], emerged in the ] region, which had a large entertainment industry in the city of ] as well as a major sea port in ]. American occupation forces fought against them in vain and conceded defeat in 1950. Yakuza also adapted to a more western style, including wearing clothing reminiscent of US gangsters, and began to use firearms. At this point, tekiya and bakuto no longer confined themselves to their traditional activities and expanded into any venture they found profitable. At the same time gurentai began to adopt traditional roles of tekiya and bakuto. They also began to feud among themselves, jockeying for power and prestige.


The ''oyabun'' of the organization is generally called a {{nihongo3||組長|kumichō}} or {{nihongo3|chairman|会長|kaichō}}, the person corresponding to pseudo younger brother of the ''kumichō'' is called a {{nihongo3||舎弟|shatei}}, and the person corresponding to pseudo child of the ''kumichō'' (''kobun'') is called a {{nihongo3||若中|wakanaka}} or {{nihongo3||若衆|wakashū}}.<ref name="zak101015">{{cite web|url=https://www.zakzak.co.jp/society/domestic/news/20151010/dms1510101530002-n1.htm?view=pc|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240512133953/https://www.zakzak.co.jp/society/domestic/news/20151010/dms1510101530002-n1.htm?view=pc|script-title=ja:【続・山口組分裂の深層】ヤクザ組織を支える「直参制度」 若頭、舎弟が意味するものとは (1/2ページ)|language=ja|publisher=]|date=|archive-date=12 May 2024|access-date=12 May 2024}}</ref> {{nihongo3||舎弟|Shatei}} means younger brother, and its status varies greatly depending on whose brother it is. From the perspective of the organization as a whole, ''shatei'' generally refers to the younger brother of an ''oyabun'', and thus to a high-ranking person in the organization,<ref name="zak101015"/> but it is also possible for a lower-level member to refer to his pseudo younger brother as a ''shatei''.<ref name="matsue8"> 松江地区建設業暴力追放対策協議会</ref>
In the 1960s, ], an ex-], began to negotiate treaties with various groups, first with the ] of ] and ] of ] and eventually with the ]. Fights between individual gangs, however, are ongoing.


Although positions in yakuza organizations vary from clan to clan, the three most important yakuza positions are ''kumichō'', {{nihongo3|second-in-command and pseudo eldest son of the ''kumichō''|若頭|wakagashira}}, and {{nihongo3|pseudo oldest younger brother of the ''kumichō''|舎弟頭|shateigashira}}. {{nihongo3|general manager|本部長|Honbuchō}}, {{nihongo3|deputy ''kumichō''|副組長|fuku-kumichō}}, and {{nihongo3|secretary general|事務局長|jimukyokuchō}}, are also important positions.<ref name="bungei280522">{{cite web|url=https://bunshun.jp/articles/-/41017?page=4|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220528021022/https://bunshun.jp/articles/-/41017?page=4|script-title=ja:「やっぱり殺られてしもうたか…」 神戸山口組幹部・死へのカウントダウン|language=ja|publisher=]|date=27 October 2020|archive-date=28 May 2022|access-date=12 May 2024}}</ref><ref name="shogaku10424"/> In general, the {{nihongo3|executive office|執行部|shikkōbu}} of an organization is run by the ''wakagashira'', ''shateigashira'', and ''honbuchō''. Since the ''shatei'' are the pseudo-younger brothers of the ''kumichō'', they are generally older and have higher nominal positions but relatively little real authority.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://shokugyou.biz/page/63|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240403042402/https://shokugyou.biz/page/63|script-title=ja:ヤクザの役職・階級一覧|組織図や年収、序列を明解に解説|language=ja|publisher=Shokugyou datebase|date=|archive-date=3 April 2024|access-date=12 May 2024}}</ref> In the Yamaguchi-gumi pecking order as of 2024, the order is ''kumichō'', ''wakagashira'', ''shateigashira'', and ''honbuchō''.<ref name="shogaku10424">{{cite web|url=https://www.news-postseven.com/archives/20240110_1933317.html?DETAIL|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240411234646/https://www.news-postseven.com/archives/20240110_1933317.html?DETAIL|script-title=ja:【六代目山口組の餅つきに密着】参加者は「PCR検査必須」、会場はさながら高級ブランドのファッションショー、高山若頭は50万超のフランス製ダウンジャケット|language=ja|publisher=]|date=|archive-date=11 April 2024|access-date=12 May 2024}}</ref>
==Organization and activities==
]


Yakuza groups are headed by an ''oyabun'' (''kumichō'' or ''kaichō'') who gives orders to his subordinates, the ''kobun''. In this respect, the organization is a variation of the traditional Japanese ]-] (senior-junior) model. Members of yakuza cut their real family ties and transfer their loyalty to the ''oyabun''. They refer to each other as family members—{{nihongo3|fathers|親父|oyaji}}, {{nihongo3|uncles|叔父貴|ojiki}}, and {{nihongo3|elder and younger brothers|兄弟|kyōdai}}. Among brothers, it is common to refer to a person equal to oneself as ''kyōdai'', a younger brother as ''kyōdai'' or ''shatei'', and an older brother as {{nihongo3|older broher|兄貴|aniki}}.<ref name="matsue8"/> The yakuza is populated almost entirely by men and the very few women who are acknowledged are the wives of bosses, who are referred to by the title {{nihongo|''ane-san''|姐さん||older sister}}. When the 3rd Yamaguchi-gumi boss (]) died in the early 1980s, his wife (Fumiko) took over as boss of Yamaguchi-gumi, albeit for a short time.
===Structure===
During the formation of the yakuza, they adopted the traditional Japanese hierarchical structure of ]-kobun where ''kobun'' (子分; lit. foster child) owe their allegiance to the ''oyabun'' (親分; lit. foster parent). In a much later period, the code of "]" (仁義, justice and duty) was developed where loyalty and respect are a way of life. The oyabun-kobun relationship is formalized by ceremonial sharing of ] from a single cup. This ritual is not exclusive to the yakuza — it is also commonly performed in traditional Japanese ] weddings, and may have been a part of "sworn brotherhood" relationships.


During the World War II period in Japan, the more traditional tekiya/bakuto form of organization declined as the entire population was mobilised to participate in the war effort and society came under strict military government. However, after the war, the yakuza adapted again. During the ] period in Japan, the more traditional tekiya/bakuto form of organization declined as the entire population was mobilised to participate in the war effort and society came under the control of the strict military government. However, after the war, the Yakuza adapted again.


==== Rituals ====
Prospective yakuza come from all walks of life. The most romantic tales tell how yakuza accept sons who have been abandoned or exiled by their parents. Many yakuza start out in junior high school or high school as common street thugs or members of ] gangs. Some yakuza "goons" are actually mentally handicapped, but recruited due to their large physiques. Perhaps because of its lower socio-economic status, numerous yakuza members come from ] and ethnic Korean. The leadership levels of yakuza gangs usually consist of very sharp, cunning, intelligent men, as the process to rise to the top-levels in the yakuza can be very competitive and Darwinian.
] tattoos, 1870s]]


], also referred to as '']'', or the cutting off of one's finger, is a form of penance or apology. Upon a first offence, the transgressor must cut off the tip of his left little finger and give the severed portion to his boss. Sometimes an underboss may do this in penance to the oyabun if he wants to spare a member of his own gang from further retaliation. This practice has started to wane amongst the younger members, due to it being an easy identifier for police.<ref name="cnn.com">{{cite news| url=http://www.cnn.com/2015/09/15/asia/yakuza-yamaguchi-gumi-explainer/ | publisher=CNN | title=The Yakuza: Inside Japan's murky criminal underworld}}</ref>
Yakuza groups are headed by an ''Oyabun'' or ''Kumichō'' (組長, family head) who gives orders to his subordinates, the ''kobun''. In this respect, the organization is a variation of the traditional Japanese ]-] (senior-junior) model. Members of yakuza gangs cut their family ties and transfer their loyalty to the gang boss. They refer to each other as family members - fathers and elder and younger brothers. The Yakuza is populated entirely by men, and there are usually no women involved except the Oyabun's wife who is called "o-neh-san" (older sister). Unlike many crime groups, women are sometimes involved in its activities. When the Yamaguchi-gumi (Family) boss was shot in the late nineties, his wife took over as boss of Yamaguchi-gumi, albeit for a short time.


Its origin stems from the traditional way of holding a ]. The bottom three fingers of each hand are used to grip the sword tightly, with the thumb and index fingers slightly loose. The removal of digits starting with the little finger and moving up the hand to the index finger progressively weakens a person's sword grip.
Each member's connection is ranked by the hierarchy of sakazuki (sake sharing). Kumicho are at the top, and control various ''saikō-komon'' (最高顧問, senior advisors). The saikō-komon control their own turfs in different areas or cities. They have their own underlings, including other underbosses, advisors, accountants and enforcers. Those who have received sake from oyabun are part of the immediate family and ranked in terms of elder or younger brothers. However, each kobun, in turn, can offer sakazuki as oyabun to his underling to form an affiliated organisation, which might in turn form lower ranked organisations. In the Yamaguchi-gumi, which controls some 2500 businesses and 500 yakuza groups, there are even 5th rank subsidiary organisations.


The idea is that a person with a weak sword grip then has to rely more on the group for protection—reducing individual action. In recent years, ] fingertips have been developed to disguise this distinctive appearance.<ref name="trutv.com"/>
===Rituals===
], or finger-cutting, is a form of penance or apology. Upon a first offense, the transgressor must cut off the tip of his left pinky finger and hand the severed portion to his boss. Sometimes an underboss may do this in penance to the oyabun if he wants to spare a member of his own gang from further retaliation. Its origin stems from the traditional way of holding a Japanese sword. The bottom three fingers of each hand are used to grip the sword tightly, with the thumb and index fingers slightly loose. The removal of digits starting with the little finger moving up the hand to the index finger progressively weakens a person's sword grip. The idea is that a person with a weak sword grip then has to rely more on the group for protection &mdash; reducing individual action. In recent years, prosthetic fingertips have been developed to disguise this distinctive appearance. (When the British cartoon '']'' was first considered for import to Japan, there were plans in place to add an extra digit to each of the title character's four-fingered hands to avoid scaring children. The same thing was also considered for the show '']''.)


Many Yakuza have full-body tattoos. These tattoos, known as ] in Japan, are still often "hand-poked," that is, the ink is inserted beneath the skin using non-electrical, hand-made and hand held tools with needles of sharpened bamboo or steel. The procedure is expensive and painful and can take years to complete.<ref>'']'', ], Series 2, Episode 3, first aired 21 September 2006</ref> Many yakuza have full-body tattoos (including their ]). These tattoos, known as ] in Japan, are still often "hand-poked", that is, the ink is inserted beneath the skin using non-electrical, hand-made, and handheld tools with needles of sharpened bamboo or steel. The procedure is expensive and painful, and can take years to complete.<ref>'']'', ], Series 2, Episode 3, first aired 21 September 2006</ref>


When yakuza play ] cards with each other, they often remove their shirts or open them up and drape them around their waists. This enables them to display their full-body tattoos to each other. This is one of the few times that yakuza display their tattoos to others, as they normally keep them concealed in public with long-sleeved and high-necked shirts. When new members join, they are often required to remove their trousers as well and reveal any lower body tattoos.{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}}
Yakuza in prison sometime perform ]s: for each year spent in prison one pearl is inserted under the skin of the ].


==Syndicates==
When yakuza members play ] cards with each other, they often remove their shirts or open them up and drape them around their waists. This allows them to display their full-body tattoos to each other. This is one of the few times that yakuza members display their tattoos to others, as they normally keep them concealed in public with long-sleeved and high-necked shirts.
{{Further|List of Yakuza syndicates}}


=== Number of members and quasi-members ===
Another prominent yakuza ritual is the ]-sharing ceremony. This is used to seal bonds of brotherhood between individual yakuza members, or between two yakuza groups. For example, in August ], the Godfathers ] and ] held a sake-sharing ceremony, sealing a new bond between their respective gangs, the ] and the ].
The total number of yakuza members and quasi-members peaked at 184,100 in 1963, and then continued to decline due to police crackdowns.<ref name="npa99"/> The number of regular members decreased with the implementation of the {{nihongo|Act on Prevention of Unjust Acts by Organized Crime Group Members|]|}} in 1992,<ref name="genmika"/> and the total number of members and quasi-members began to decline rapidly with the implementation of the ] in all 47 prefectures around 2010. Between 1990 and 2020, the total number of members and quasi-members decreased by 70 percent.<ref name="nhk300622"/>


The National Police Agency reported that Japanese yakuza organizations had 10,400 members and 10,000 quasi-members in 2023.<ref name="npa"/>
===Current activities===
Much of the current activities of the yakuza can be understood in the light of their feudal origin. First, they are not a secret society like their counterparts of the ] ] and ] ]s. Yakuza organizations often have an office with a wooden board on the front door, openly displaying their group name or emblem. Members often wear sunglasses and colourful suits so that their profession can be immediately recognized by civilians (''katagi''). Even the way many Yakuza walk is markedly different from ordinary citizens. Their arrogant, wide gait is markedly different from the quiet, unassuming way many Japanese go about their business. Alternatively, they can be more conservatively dressed but when the need arises, they can flash their tattoos to indicate their affiliation. On occasion they also sport insignia pins on their lapels. One Yakuza family even printed a monthly newsletter with details on prisons, weddings, funerals, murders, and poems by leaders.


=== Designated yakuza (''Shitei Bōryokudan'') ===
Until recently, the majority of yakuza income came from protection rackets in shopping, entertainment and red-light districts within their territory. This is mainly due to the reluctance of such businesses to seek help from the police. The Japanese police are also reluctant to interfere in internal matters in recognized communities such as shopping arcades, schools/universities, night districts and so on. In this sense, yakuza are still regarded as semi-legitimate organizations. For example, immediately after the ], the Yamaguchi-gumi, whose headquarters are in ], mobilised itself to provide disaster relief services (including the use of a helicopter), and this was widely reported by the media as a contrast to the much slower response by the Japanese government. For this reason, many yakuza regard their income and hustle (shinogi) as a collection of a feudal tax.
A {{nihongo|designated yakuza|指定暴力団|Shitei Bōryokudan}}<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110810212614/http://www.npa.go.jp/english/kokusai/20.pdf |date=10 August 2011 }}, December 2009, '']''</ref> is a "particularly harmful" yakuza group<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120119010309/http://www.fukuoka-boutui.or.jp/mob/index.html |date=19 January 2012 }}, '']'' {{in lang|ja}}</ref> registered by the ] ] under the {{nihongo|Act on Prevention of Unjust Acts by Organized Crime Group Members|暴力団対策法|Bōryokudan Taisaku Hō}} enacted in 1991.<ref>, December 2010, ''] ]'' {{in lang|ja}}</ref> Groups are designated as {{nihongo3|designated yakuza||Shitei Bōryokudan}} if their members take advantage of the gang's influence to do business, are structured to have one leader, and have a large portion of their members hold criminal records.<ref name="openscholarship.wustl.edu"/> After the Act on Prevention of Unjust Acts by Organized Crime Group Members was enacted, many yakuza syndicates made efforts to restructure to appear more professional and legitimate.<ref name="openscholarship.wustl.edu">{{cite journal|last1=Reilly|first1=Edward|title=Criminalizing Yakuza Membership: A Comparative Study of the Anti-Boryokudan Law|journal=Washington University Global Studies Law Review|date=1 January 2014|volume=13|issue=4|pages=801–829|id= {{Gale|A418089219}} |url=https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/law_globalstudies/vol13/iss4/9/}}</ref>


As of 2023, Under the Act on Prevention of Unjust Acts by Organized Crime Group Members, the Prefectural Public Safety Commissions have registered 25 syndicates as the designated yakuza groups. Three of these organizations have more than 1,000 regular members, eight have more than 100, and 14 have less than 100. ] has the largest number of designated yakuza groups among all of the prefectures, at 5; the ], the ], the ], the ], and the ].<ref name="npa"/>
Yakuza frequently engage in a uniquely Japanese form of extortion, known as '']'' (総会屋). In essence, this is a specialized form of protection racket. Instead of harassing small businesses, the yakuza harasses a stockholders' meeting of a larger corporation. They simply scare the ordinary stockholder with the presence of yakuza operatives, who obtain the right to attend the meeting by a small purchase of stock. They also engage in simple blackmail, obtaining incriminating or embarrassing information about a company's practices or leaders. Once the yakuza gain a foothold in these companies, they will work for them to protect the company from having such internal scandals exposed to the public. Some companies still include payoffs as part of their annual budget.


In August 2021, the Fukuoka District Court sentenced ], the fifth head of ], to death for murder and attempted murder. This was the first death sentence handed down to a designated yakuza head. Kudo-kai is the only one of the designated yakuza to be designated as a {{nihongo|especially dangerous designated yakuza|特定危険指定暴力団|Tokutei Kiken Shitei Bōryokudan}}, a more dangerous type of yakuza.<ref> ]. 5 October 2021</ref>
The Yakuza have a strong influence in Japanese ], or ]. Most of their interest in wrestling activities and promotions is purely financial. The Yakuza have mostly gotten involved by financially supporting wrestling promotions with fading fortunes, or simple business loans. Many venues used by wrestling (arenas, stadiums, and so forth) are owned or connected to the Yakuza, and as such, when a promotion uses one of their sites, the Yakuza receive a percentage of the gate. The Yakuza as a whole is regarded as a great supporter of both puroresu and ]. It's not unusual for wrestlers to receive specific instructions on what to do in their matches so as to appeal just to Yakuza members in the crowd. It is thought in Japan that it is safe to say that none of the large wrestling promotions in Japan would fold, because they would be rescued by the Yakuza. The pioneer of wrestling in Japan, ], was killed by the Yakuza. ] wrestler ] was asked to start a Yakuza gimmick, an offer he quickly refused fearfully. Professional wrestler ] is often referred to as "Kumicho (i.e, "Godfather") and his wrestling promotion was called the ]. He often portrays Yakuza figures as an actor on Japanese television comedies and dramas.


===Three largest syndicates and six major syndicates===
Yakuza also have ties to the Japanese realty market and banking, through ''jiageya'' (地上げ屋). Jiageya specialize in inducing holders of small real estate to sell their property so that estate companies can carry out much larger development plans. Japan's bubble economy of the 1980s is often blamed on real estate speculation by banking subsidiaries. After the collapse of the Japanese property bubble, a manager of a major bank in ] was assassinated, and much speculation ensued about the banking industry's indirect connection to the Japanese underworld.
As of 2023, the National Police Agency has designated ], ], ], ] (]), ], and ] as {{nihongo3|major organizations|主要団体|Shuyō dantai}} among the designated yakuza. These six organizations have a total of 7,700 members and 6,800 quasi-members, for a total of 14,500 members, or 71.1 percent of the total 20,400 yakuza members and quasi-members in Japan.<ref name="npa"/>


Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi split off from Yamaguchi-gumi in August 2015, Kizuna-kai split off from Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi in April 2017, and Ikeda-gumi split off from Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi in July 2020. These Yamaguchi-gumi and the three organizations that split from them are fighting each other.<ref name="npa"/>
Yakuza have been known to make large investments in legitimate, mainstream companies. In 1989 Susumu Ishii, the Oyabun of the Inagawa Alliance (a well known Yakuza group) bought ] 255 million worth of ]'s stock.


In recent years, the three major yakuza syndicates have formed a loose alliance, and in April 2023, ], the ''wakagashira'' (second-in-command) of the ], ], the ''kaichō'' (chairman) of the ], and ] (]), the ''kaichō'' of the ], held a social gathering.<ref> Yahoo Japan News. 13 April 2023</ref>
As a matter of principle, theft is not recognised as a legitimate activity of yakuza. This is in line with idea that their activities are semi-open; theft by definition would be a covert activity. More importantly, such an act would be considered a trespass by the community. Also, yakuza usually do not conduct the actual business operation by themselves. Core business activities such as merchandising, loan sharking or management of gambling houses are typically managed by non-yakuza members who pay protection fees for their activities.


{| class=wikitable
There is much evidence of Yakuza involvement in international crime. There are many tattooed Yakuza members imprisoned in various Asian prisons for such crimes as drug trafficking and arms smuggling. In 1997, one verified Yakuza member was caught smuggling 4 kilograms (8.82 pounds) of ] into Canada. In 1999, Italian-American ] ] member, Mickey Zaffarano, was overheard talking about the profits of the pornography trade that both families could profit from.{{Fact|date=April 2007}} Another Yakuza racket is bringing women of other ethnicities/races, especially ]{{Fact|date=February 2007}} and ] to Japan under the lure of a glamourous position, then forcing the women into prostitution.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
! Principal families
! Description
! ]
|-----
| {{Nihongo|]|山口組}}
| The Yamaguchi-gumi is the largest yakuza family, accounting for 30% of all yakuza in Japan, with 3,500 members and 3,800 quasi-members as of 2023.<ref name="npa"/> From its headquarters in ], it directs criminal activities throughout Japan. It is also involved in operations in Asia and the United States. ], also known as Kenichi Shinoda, is the Yamaguchi-gumi's current oyabun. He follows an expansionist policy and has increased operations in ] (which has not traditionally been the territory of the Yamaguchi-gumi.)


One of the best-known bosses of the Yamaguchi-gumi was ], the "Godfather of all Godfathers", who was responsible for the syndicate's massive growth and success during the 20th century.<ref name="Taoka Kazuo, a Japanese organized crime boss">{{cite web |last1=Britannica |first1=Encyclopedia |title=Taoka Kazuo, Japanese crime boss |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Taoka-Kazuo |website=www.britannica.com |publisher=The editors of Encyclopedia Britannica |access-date=4 May 2022}}</ref>
Because of their history as a legitimate feudal organization and their connection to the Japanese political system through the ''uyoku'' (extreme right-wing political groups), yakuza are somewhat a part of the Japanese establishment. In the early 80s in ], a yakuza war spiraled out of control and a few civilians were hurt. The police stepped in and forced the yakuza bosses on both sides to declare a truce in public. At various times, people in Japanese cities have launched anti-yakuza campaigns with mixed and varied success. In March 1995, the Japanese government passed the "Act for Prevention of Unlawful Activities by Criminal Gang Members" which made traditional ] much more difficult.
| ]
<!--"The meaning of the samurai sword is in the warrior and the sword as one it could be a dangerous opponent"-->
"Yamabishi" (山菱)
|-
| {{Nihongo|]|住吉会}}
| The Sumiyoshi-kai is the second-largest yakuza family, with an estimated 2,200 members and 1,300 quasi-members as of 2023.<ref name="npa"/> Sumiyoshi-kai is a confederation of smaller yakuza groups. Its current head (会長 kai-cho) is Shūji Ogawa. Structurally, Sumiyoshi-kai differs from its principal rival, the ], in that it functions like a ]. The chain of command is more relaxed, and its leadership is distributed among several other members.
| ]
|-
| {{Nihongo|]|稲川会}}
| The Inagawa-kai is the third-largest yakuza family in Japan, with roughly 1,700 members and 1,200 quasi-members as of 2023.<ref name="npa"/> It is based in the Tokyo-Yokohama area and was one of the first yakuza families to expand its operations outside of Japan.
| ]
|}


== Current activities ==
==See also==
=== Japan ===
*]
In the 2010s and 2020s, the yakuza's main source of funding is a fraud called {{nihongo3|special fraud|特殊詐欺|tokushu sagi}}, which mainly targets the elderly to cheat them out of large amounts of money. Their methods include calling the homes of elderly people to beg for money by pretending to be the elderly person's son, or visiting the homes of elderly people posing as employees of financial institutions to swindle them out of their money. In 2014, ''tokushu sagi'' accounted for 10.4 percent of all yakuza arrests, surpassing theft for the first time at 10.2 percent, and 34.6 percent of ''tokushu sagi'' perpetrators were yakuza and their associates. The total damage from ''tokushu sagi'' identified in 2019 exceeded 30 billion yen, and while yakuza accounted for just over 10 percent of the lowest level members of criminal groups, such as cash receivers who play the role of financial institution employees, yakuza accounted for nearly 40 percent of the main perpetrators leading fraud schemes.<ref name="nik120515">{{cite web|url=https://www.nikkei.com/article/DGXLASDG10H4N_S5A310C1CC0000/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150315075415/https://www.nikkei.com/article/DGXLASDG10H4N_S5A310C1CC0000/|script-title=ja:暴力団、資金源を特殊詐欺にシフト 14年の摘発2337人と最多|language=ja|publisher=]|date=12 March 2015|archive-date=15 March 2015|access-date=10 May 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.dailyshincho.jp/article/2020/10180558/?all=1|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201020221712/https://www.dailyshincho.jp/article/2020/10180558/?all=1|script-title=ja:暴力団の主たる資金源「特殊詐欺」にオドロキ判決 背景に「警察」「民暴弁護士」の活躍|language=ja|publisher=]|date=18 October 2020|archive-date=20 October 2020|access-date=10 May 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://mainichi.jp/articles/20190328/k00/00m/040/061000c|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190328214629/https://mainichi.jp/articles/20190328/k00/00m/040/061000c|script-title=ja:特殊詐欺に暴力団関与 「主犯」の半数 組織の資金源か 警察庁まとめ|language=ja|publisher=]|date=28 March 2019|archive-date=28 March 2019|access-date=10 May 2024}}</ref>
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]


The yakuza and its affiliated gangs control drug trafficking in Japan, especially ].<ref>Vorobyov, Niko (2019) ''Dopeworld.'' Hodder, UK. p. 91–93</ref> While many yakuza syndicates, notably the ], officially forbid their members from engaging in ], some other yakuza syndicates, like the ], are heavily involved in it. The most common charge for yakuza and their associates arrested in 2014 was violation of the {{nihongo3|Stimulants Control Act|覚せい剤取締法|}}, which prohibits the import, export, sale, transfer, possession, and use of methamphetamine, accounting for 26.5 percent of arrests.<ref name="nik120515"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.japaneselawtranslation.go.jp/ja/laws/view/2814/je|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231214081252/https://www.japaneselawtranslation.go.jp/ja/laws/view/2814/je#je_ch3|script-title=ja:Stimulants Control Act|language=ja|publisher=]|date=|archive-date=14 December 2023|access-date=10 May 2024}}</ref>
==References==
<references/>


Some yakuza groups are known to deal extensively in ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.humantrafficking.org/countries/japan|title=HumanTrafficking.org, "Human Trafficking in Japan"|access-date=10 November 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111115130632/http://www.humantrafficking.org/countries/japan|archive-date=15 November 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref> In the ] Yakuza trick girls from impoverished villages into coming to Japan by promising them respectable jobs with good wages. Instead, they are forced into becoming sex workers and strippers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/gangsters_outlaws/gang/yakuza/4.html|title=The Yakuza, the Japanese Mafia – The Crime Library – Crime Library on truTV.com}}</ref>
===Books===
* Kaplan and Dubro; ''Yakuza'' (], Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-11151-9)
* Kaplan and Dubro; ''Yakuza: Expanded Edition'' (], University of California Press, ISBN 0-520-21562-1)
* Peter B. E. Hill; ''The Japanese Mafia : Yakuza, Law, and the State'' (], Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-925752-3)
* David T. Johnson; ''The Japanese Way of Justice : Prosecuting Crime in Japan'' (]. Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-511986-X)
* ]; ''Toppamono: Outlaw. Radical. Suspect. My Life in Japan's Underworld'' (], Kotan Publishing, ISBN 0-9701716-2-5)
* Christopher Seymour; ''Yakuza Diary'' (], Atlantic Monthly Press, ISBN 0-87113-604-X)
* Junichi Saga; '']'' (])
* Mark Schilling; ''The Yakuza Movie Book'' (], Stone Bridge Press, ISBN 1-880656-76-0)
* Claire Sterling; ''Thieves' World'' (] Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0-671-74997-8)
* Sho Fumimura-Writer, Ryoichi Ikegami-Artist; "Sanctuary"
* Hideo Yamamoto; ''Ichi The Killer'' (])


] district of ] has historically been known as a popular yakuza hangout in Tokyo.]]
===Selected film references===
Yakuza frequently engaged in a unique form of Japanese ] known as '']''. In essence, this is a specialized form of ]. Instead of harassing small businesses, the Yakuza harass a stockholders' meeting of a larger corporation. Yakuza operatives obtain the right to attend by making a small purchase of stock, and then at the meeting physically intimidate other stockholders. The number of {{transl|ja|sōkaiya}} has decreased over the years, and in 2023 there were only about 150 {{transl|ja|sōkaiya}}, of whom 30 worked in groups and 120 worked alone.<ref name="npa-7">{{cite web|url=https://www.npa.go.jp/sosikihanzai/R05sotaijousei/r5jousei.pdf|title=Organized Crime Situation 2023|page=7|website=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240330010050/https://www.npa.go.jp/sosikihanzai/R05sotaijousei/r5jousei.pdf|accessdate=30 March 2024|archive-date=30 March 2024}}</ref>
{{main|Yakuza film}}
* '']'' (], 1964)
* '']'' (], 1966)
* '']'' (], 1973)
* '']'' (], 1975)
* '']'' (], 1989)
* '']'' (], 1992)
* '']'' (], 1993)
* '']'' (], 1999)
* '']'' (], 2000)
* '']'' (], 2000)
* '']'' (], 2003)
* '']'' (], 2001)
* '']'' (], 2003)
* '']'', (2006)
* '']'' (2006)


Yakuza also had ties to the Japanese real estate market and banking sector through ''jiageya''. Jiageya specializes in inducing holders of small real estate to sell their property so that estate companies can carry out much larger development plans. The ] of the 1980s is often blamed on real estate speculation by banking subsidiaries. After the collapse of the property bubble, a manager of a major bank in ] was assassinated, prompting much speculation about the banking industry's indirect connection to the Japanese underworld.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.ft.com/content/57bcd6b2-9ecd-11e5-b45d-4812f209f861 |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221210/https://www.ft.com/content/57bcd6b2-9ecd-11e5-b45d-4812f209f861 |archive-date=10 December 2022 |url-access=subscription | work=Financial Times | title=US clamps down on Japanese Yakuza mafia}}</ref>
===Selected television references===
] where they often ride the shrine through the streets proudly showing off their elaborate tattoos.]]
* '']'', ("]")
* '']''


In 1989, Susumu Ishii, the ] of the ] (a well-known yakuza group) bought ]255 million worth of ]'s stock.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Kaplan |first1=David E. |last2=Dubro |first2=Alec |title=Yakuza: Japan's Criminal Underworld |year=2012 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-27490-7 }}{{page needed|date=August 2020}}</ref> Japan's ] has knowledge of more than 50 listed companies with ties to organized crime, and in March 2008, the ] decided to review all listed companies and expel those with yakuza ties.<ref name=adelstein>Jake Adelstein. , '']'', 11 May 2008</ref>
===Selected video game references===

* '']''
Yakuza involvement in politics functions similarly to that of a ], with them backing those who share in their opinions or beliefs.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://foreignpolicy.com/2012/12/13/the-yakuza-lobby/ | work=Foreign Policy | title=The Yakuza Lobby}}</ref>
* '']''

* '']''
====Yakuza's aid in earthquakes====
* '']''
In the wake of the ], the ] yakuza group, who are based in the area, mobilized to provide disaster relief services (including the use of a helicopter). Media reports contrasted this rapid response with the much slower pace at which the Japanese government's official relief efforts took place.<ref>{{citation | work = The New York Times | url = https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990CE2DF1E31F931A15752C0A963958260 | title = Quake in Japan: Gangsters; Gang in Kobe Organizes Aid for People in Quake | first=James | last=Sterngold | date=22 January 1995}}.</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Sawada |first1=Yasuyuki |last2=Shimizutani |first2=Satoshi |title=How Do People Cope with Natural Disasters? Evidence from the Great Hanshin-Awaji (Kobe) Earthquake in 1995 |journal=Journal of Money, Credit and Banking |date=March 2008 |volume=40 |issue=2–3 |pages=463–488 |doi=10.1111/j.1538-4616.2008.00122.x }}</ref>
* '']''

* '']''
Following the ] on 11 March 2011, the yakuza sent hundreds of trucks filled with food, water, blankets, and sanitary accessories to aid the people in the affected areas of the natural disaster.<ref name= adelstein20110318>{{cite web |url= https://www.thedailybeast.com/japanese-yakuza-aid-earthquake-relief-efforts |title = Japanese Yakuza Aid Earthquake Relief Efforts |date=2011-03-18 |last=Adelstein |first=Jake |website= The Daily Beast |access-date= 2021-07-08}}</ref>
* '']''
] said that although the yakuza operates through extortion and other violent methods, they " swiftly and quietly to provide aid to those most in need."<ref name=cnnmexico>{{cite news|title=La mafia japonesa de los 'yakuza' envía alimentos a las víctimas del sismo|url=http://mexico.cnn.com/mundo/2011/03/25/la-mafia-japonesa-de-los-yakuza-envia-alimentos-a-las-victimas-del-sismo|access-date=28 February 2012|newspaper=]|date=25 March 2011|language=es}}</ref>

=== United States ===
The presence of individuals affiliated with the yakuza in the United States has increased tremendously since the 1960s, and although much of their activity is concentrated in ], they have made their presence known in other parts of the country, especially in ] and the ], as well as ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref name=crimelibrary> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080911231912/http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/gangsters_outlaws/gang/yakuza/5.html |date=11 September 2008 }}, Crimelibrary.com</ref><ref name=yakuza03-america>{{cite book |last1=Kaplan |first1=David E. |last2=Dubro |first2=Alec |title=Yakuza: Japan's Criminal Underworld |year=2003 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-21562-7 }}{{page needed|date=August 2020}}</ref> The yakuza are said to use Hawaii as a midway station between Japan and mainland America, smuggling ] into the country and smuggling firearms back to Japan. They easily fit into the local population, since many tourists from Japan and other Asian countries visit the islands on a regular basis, and there is a large population of residents who are of full or partial Japanese descent. They also work with local gangs, funneling Japanese tourists to gambling parlors and brothels.<ref name=crimelibrary/>

In California, the yakuza have made alliances with local Korean gangs as well as ] and Vietnamese gangs. The yakuza identified these gangs as useful partners due to the constant stream of Vietnamese cafe shoot-outs and home invasion burglaries throughout the 1980s and early 1990s. In New York City, they appear to collect finder's fees from Russian, Irish and Italian gang members and businessmen for guiding Japanese tourists to gambling establishments, both legal and illegal.<ref name=crimelibrary/>

]s manufactured in the US account for a large share (33%) of handguns seized in Japan, followed by handguns manufactured in ] (16%) and in the ] (10%). In 1990, a ] ] ] that cost $275 in the US could sell for up to $4,000 in Tokyo.{{citation needed|date=January 2024}}

In 2001, the FBI's representative in Tokyo arranged for ], the head of the group ], to receive a ] at the ] in the United States, in return for information of Yamaguchi-gumi operations in the US. This was done without prior consultation of the ]. The journalist who uncovered the deal received threats from Goto and was given police protection in the US and in Japan.<ref name="adelstein"/>

The ] suspects that the yakuza were using various operations to launder money in the US {{as of|2008|lc=y}}.<ref name=adelstein/>

=== Asia (outside Japan) ===
The yakuza have engaged in illegal activities in ] since the 1960s; they are working there to develop sex tourism and drug trafficking.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bouissou |first1=Jean-Marie |title=Le marché des services criminels au Japon. Les yakuzas et l'État |trans-title=The criminal services market in Japan. The Yakuza and the State |language=fr |journal=Critique Internationale |year=1999 |volume=3 |issue=1 |pages=155–174 |doi=10.3406/criti.1999.1602 |url=https://hal-sciencespo.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01010801/file/ci03p155-174.pdf }}</ref> This is the area where they are still the most active today.

In addition to their presence in Southeast Asian countries such as ], the ], and ], yakuza groups also operate in ], ], ], and in the ] (mainly ]).<ref name="page104" >Jean-François Gayraud, ''Le Monde des mafias'', édition 2008, p. 104</ref>

Yakuza groups also have a presence in North Korea; in 2009, yakuza Yoshiaki Sawada was released from a North Korean prison after spending five years there attempting to bribe a North Korean official and smuggle drugs.<ref> 2009-01-16 The Japan Times</ref>

==Constituent members==
Prospective yakuza come from all walks of life. The most romantic tales tell how yakuza accept sons who have been abandoned or exiled by their parents. Many yakuza start out in junior high school or high school as common street thugs or members of ] gangs. Perhaps because of its lower socio-economic status, numerous yakuza members come from burakumin and ethnic Korean backgrounds. Low-ranking youth may be referred to as ''chinpira'' or ''chimpira''.<ref name="Dore2015">{{cite book|author=Ronald Philip Dore|title=Aspects of Social Change in Modern Japan|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Rat9BgAAQBAJ&pg=PA308|date=8 March 2015|publisher=Princeton University Press|isbn=978-1-4008-7206-0|pages=308}}</ref><ref name="SJ2014">{{cite book|author=Luis Frois SJ|title=The First European Description of Japan, 1585: A Critical English-Language Edition of Striking Contrasts in the Customs of Europe and Japan by Luis Frois, S.J.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h8YTAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA36|date=14 March 2014|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-317-91781-6|pages=36}}</ref>

According to a 2006 speech by Mitsuhiro Suganuma, a former officer of the Public Security Intelligence Agency, around 60 percent of yakuza members come from burakumin, the descendants of a feudal outcast class and approximately 30 percent of yauza are Japanese-born Koreans, and only 10 percent are from non-burakumin Japanese and Chinese ethnic groups.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fccj.or.jp/node/1468|title=Mitsuhiro Suganuma, "Japan's Intelligence Services"|publisher=The Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan|access-date=3 October 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120330051608/http://www.fccj.or.jp/node/1468|archive-date=30 March 2012|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=Capital punishment – Japan's Yakuza Vie for Control of Tokyo |journal=Jane's Intelligence Review |date=December 2009 |url=http://www.kosuke.net/japanyakuza.pdf |page=4|quote=Around 60% of yakuza members come from burakumin, the descendants of a feudal outcast class, according to a 2006 speech by Mitsuhiro Suganuma, a former officer of the Public Security Intelligence Agency. He also said that approximately 30% of yakuza are Japanese-born Koreans, and only 10% are from non-burakumin Japanese and Chinese ethnic groups. }}</ref>

=== Burakumin ===
The ] is a group that Japanese society socially discriminates against, and its recorded history goes back to the ] in the 11th century. The burakumin are the ] of outcast communities which originated in the pre-modern, especially the ], mainly those people with occupations which are considered tainted because they are associated with death or ], such as butchers, ]s, ]s, or ]s. They traditionally lived in their own secluded ] and villages away from other groups.

According to ] and Alec Dubro, burakumin account for about 70% of the members of ], the largest yakuza syndicate in Japan.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Dubro |first1=A. |last2=Kaplan |first2=David E. |title=Yakuza: The Explosive Account of Japan's Criminal Underworld |date= 1986 |publisher=Da Capo Press |isbn=978-0-201-11151-4 }}{{page needed|date=August 2020}}</ref>

=== Ethnic Koreans ===
While ] make up only 0.5% of the Japanese population, they are a prominent part of yakuza because they suffer discrimination in Japanese society along with the '']''.<ref name=yakuza03-133>{{cite book |last1=Kaplan |first1=David E. |last2=Dubro |first2=Alec |title=Yakuza: Japan's Criminal Underworld |year=2003 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-21562-7 |page=133 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Kristof |first1=Nicholas D. |title=Japan's Invisible Minority: Better Off Than in Past, but StillOutcasts |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1995/11/30/world/japan-s-invisible-minority-better-off-than-in-past-but-stilloutcasts.html |work=The New York Times |date=30 November 1995}}</ref> In the early 1990s, 18 of 90 top bosses of '']'' were ethnic Koreans. The ] suggested Koreans composed 10% of the yakuza proper.<ref name=yakuza03-133 /> Some of the representatives of the ] are also Koreans.<ref>{{in lang|ja}} , ], 2007, p. 22. See also ].</ref> The Korean significance had been an untouchable taboo in Japan and one of the reasons that the Japanese version of Kaplan and Dubro's ''Yakuza'' (1986) had not been published until 1991 with the deletion of Korean-related descriptions of the ''Yamaguchi-gumi''.<ref>Kaplan and Dubro (2003) Preface to the new edition.</ref>

Japanese-born people of Korean ancestry who retain South Korean nationality are considered resident aliens and are embraced by the yakuza precisely because they fit the group's "outsider" image.<ref>Bruno, A. (2007). ''The Yakuza, the Japanese Mafia''. CrimeLibrary: Time Warner</ref><ref name="cnn.com"/>

Notable yakuza of Korean ancestry include ] the founder of the ], ] the head of the 4th-generation ], Jiro Kiyota (1940–) the head of the 5th-generation ], Shinichi Matsuyama (1927–) the head of the 5th-generation ] and Hirofumi Hashimoto (1947–) the founder of the Kyokushinrengo-kai (affiliated with Yamaguchi-gumi, dissolved in 2019).

==Law enforcement and indirect enforcement==
===Operation Summit===
Between 1964 and 1965, the Japanese police carried out mass arrests of yakuza leaders and executives in what they called the {{nihongo3|First Operation Summit|第一次頂上作戦|Daiichiji chōjō sakusen}} in response to public demands for the yakuza to be banished from society. As a result, crime declined and the number of arrested yakuza fell from about 59,000 in 1964 to 38,000 in 1967. The number of yakuza organizations and members also declined, from 5,216 organizations and 184,091 members in 1963 to 3,500 organizations and 139,089 members in 1969.<ref name="moj89i">{{cite web|url=https://hakusyo1.moj.go.jp/jp/30/nfm/n_30_2_4_2_5_3.html|title=White Paper on Crime 1989 3 頂上作戦とその影響(昭和30年代末~40年代前半)|pages=|website=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230731064258/https://hakusyo1.moj.go.jp/jp/30/nfm/n_30_2_4_2_5_3.html|accessdate=30 March 2024|archive-date=31 July 2023}}</ref> As a result, 1963, the year before the First Operation Summit was launched, was the peak of yakuza power.<ref name="npa99"/>

From around 1970, yakuza leaders and executives who had been imprisoned began to be released from prison, and yakuza organizations that had been disbanded during the First Operation Summit were revived and reorganized, leading the police to conduct the Second Operation Summit in 1970 and the Third Operation Summit in 1975. These series of police crackdowns led to a decline in the number of yakuza organizations and members, from 2957 organizations with 123,044 members in 1972 to 2517 organizations with 106,754 members in 1979. As a result, small yakuza organizations were forced to dissolve, and the total number of members decreased, but some members transferred to large yakuza organizations, so the number of members of large organizations actually increased during this period. The three major organizations, Yamaguchi-gumi, Sumiyoshi-kai, and Inagawa-kai, expanded during this period. During this period, Japan was in a recession following the ], and it became difficult for the yakuza to acquire sufficient financial resources through traditional methods alone, so it was inevitable that they would consolidate into large yakuza organizations with diverse or legal sources of funding.<ref name="npa99"/><ref name="moj89ni">{{cite web|url=https://hakusyo1.moj.go.jp/jp/30/nfm/n_30_2_4_2_5_4.html|title=White Paper on Crime 1989 4 広域化・寡占化による再編の時代(昭和40年代後半~50年代前半)|pages=|website=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230731194644/https://hakusyo1.moj.go.jp/jp/30/nfm/n_30_2_4_2_5_4.html|accessdate=30 March 2024|archive-date=31 July 2023}}</ref>

===Anti-yakuza laws===
The {{nihongo|Act on Prevention of Unjust Acts by Organized Crime Group Members|]|}}, passed in 1991 and enacted in 1992, was a landmark piece of legislation that cracked down on the yakuza. The law prohibited 27 acts by yakuza, including demanding hush money or donations, collecting debts and conducting land grabbing activities in an unjustified manner. The law also made it illegal to demand and collect so-called {{nihongo3|Protection racket|みかじめ料|mikajime-ryō}} from downtown restaurants and bars, which were the yakuza's main source of funding. Police could issue two cease-and-desist orders to offenders who demanded ''mikajime-ryō'', and could arrest offenders who still refused to comply. Until then, the yakuza had charged bouncer fees to restaurants and bars in their territory, especially those open at night, and made various threats, such as ramming dump trucks into businesses that refused, and business owners, fearing reprisals, had paid ''mikajime-ryō'', but the new law resulted in more businesses refusing ''mikajime-ryō'' and the yakuza's financial resources were lost. In 1991, the yakuza had 63,800 members, but by 1992, when the new law took effect, the number had dropped sharply to about 56,600, then to about 48,000 in 1994 and 43,100 in 2001.<ref name="genmika">{{cite web|url=https://gendai.media/articles/-/108038?page=2|title=「億単位のカネが簡単に集まった」暴対法から約30年…指定暴力団の幹部が明かす「バブル時代の暴力団のヤバすぎる実態」|pages=|website=]|date=30 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230528091910/https://gendai.media/articles/-/108038?page=2|accessdate=30 March 2024|archive-date=28 May 2023}}</ref><ref name="ncrco">{{cite web|url=https://www.zenboutsui.jp/jousei_taisaku/taisakuhou/27.html|title=暴力的要求行為の禁止内容|pages=|website=National Center for Removal of Criminal Organizations|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231204034646/https://www.zenboutsui.jp/jousei_taisaku/taisakuhou/27.html|accessdate=30 March 2024|archive-date=4 December 2023}}</ref>

Additional regulations can be found in a 2008 anti-yakuza amendment which allows prosecutors to place the blame on any yakuza-related crime on crime bosses. Specifically, the leader of the ] has since been incarcerated and forced to pay upwards of 85 million yen in damages of several crimes committed by his gangsters, leading to the yakuza's dismissal of around 2,000 members per year; albeit, some analysts claim that these dismissals are part of the yakuza's collective attempt to regain a better reputation amongst the populace. Regardless, the yakuza's culture, too, has shifted towards a more secretive and far less public approach to crime, as many of their traditions have been reduced or erased to avoid being identified as yakuza.<ref name="apjjf.org"/>

Beginning in 2009, led by agency chief ], Japanese police began to crack down on the gangs. Yamaguchi-gumi's number two and ] chief ] was arrested in late 2010. In December 2010, police arrested Yamaguchi-gumi's alleged number three leader, ].<ref name="afp260111">Zeller, Frank (]-]), "Yakuza served notice days of looking the other way are over," '']'', 26 January 2011, p. 3.</ref>

=== Yakuza exclusion ordinances ===
In addition to the anti-yakuza laws, the ] enacted by each of Japan's 47 prefectures between 2009 and 2011 also contributed significantly to the decline of the yakuza.<ref name="asahi031223">{{cite web|url=https://www.asahi.com/articles/ASP9Z5FP8P9SPTIL047.html|title=「早くやめておけば」あえぐ組員、強まる排除 「暴排」条例の10年|pages=|website=]|date=30 September 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231203220806/https://www.asahi.com/articles/ASP9Z5FP8P9SPTIL047.html|accessdate=30 March 2024|archive-date=3 December 2023}}</ref><ref name="nhk300622">{{cite web|url=https://www.nhk.jp/p/gendai/ts/R7Y6NGLJ6G/blog/bl/pkEldmVQ6R/bp/pMzwQVwkop/|title=30年で構成員7割減…令和時代 暴力団はいま|pages=|website=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220630044232/https://www.nhk.jp/p/gendai/ts/R7Y6NGLJ6G/blog/bl/pkEldmVQ6R/bp/pMzwQVwkop/|accessdate=30 March 2024|archive-date=30 June 2022}}</ref> Ordinances were enacted in Osaka and Tokyo in 2010 and 2011 to try to combat yakuza influence by making it illegal for any business to do business with the yakuza.<ref>Botting, Geoff, "", '']'', 16 October 2011, p. 9.</ref><ref>Schreiber, Mark, "", '']'', 4 March 2012, p. 9.</ref> While the anti-yakuza laws prohibited the yakuza from making unreasonable demands on businesses and citizens, these ordinances prohibited businesses and citizens from offering benefits to the yakuza. This made it increasingly difficult for the yakuza to raise funds, as fewer businesses and citizens succumbed to the yakuza's threats and offered benefits to the yakuza, such as contracting work or paying money to the yakuza.<ref name="asahi031223"/><ref name="nhk300622"/> According to the media, encouraged by tougher anti-yakuza laws and yakuza exclusion ordinances, local governments and construction companies have begun to shun or ban yakuza activities or involvement in their communities or construction projects.<ref name="afp260111"/>

In addition, these ordinances have made it difficult for yakuza members to lead normal civilian lives. The ordinances also require businesses and citizens to refuse to rent meeting rooms or parking spaces to the yakuza, or to print business cards with the name of yakuza organizations on them. Companies can now also refuse to open bank accounts, sign mobile phone contracts, credit card contracts, lease real estate, or process various loans for people identified as yakuza under the anti-yakuza laws, making it more difficult for yakuza to live in society.<ref name="asahi031223"/><ref name="soc250124">{{cite web|url=https://www.riskeyes.jp/hansha-check-column/72|title=元暴5年条項とは?定義や反社会的勢力排除に必要な理由を解説|pages=|website=Socialwire Co., Ltd|date=28 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240125074407/https://www.riskeyes.jp/hansha-check-column/72|accessdate=30 March 2024|archive-date=25 January 2024}}</ref><ref name="tok030723">{{cite web|url=https://www.tokyo-np.co.jp/article/259624|title=暴力団から足を洗って5年以上なのに、どうして銀行口座つくれないの? 元組員が「不合理な差別」と提訴|pages=|website=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230703142815/https://www.tokyo-np.co.jp/article/259624|accessdate=30 March 2024|archive-date=3 July 2023}}</ref> Even companies that provide lifelines have become tough on the yakuza, with ] terminating contracts if a contractor is discovered to be a yakuza. To prevent yakuza from nominally leaving the organization and signing contracts with companies, these ordinances allow companies to treat a person as a yakuza for five years even if he or she has nominally left the yakuza and become a civilian.<ref name="asahi031223"/><ref name="soc250124"/><ref name="tok030723"/>

Since 2011, regulations outlawing business with yakuza members, government-ordered audits of yakuza finances, and the enactment of ] have hastened a decline in yakuza membership. The number of yakuza members and quasi-members fell from 78,600 in 2010 to 25,900 in 2020.<ref name="asahi031223"/>

===Outside Japan===
Yakuza organizations also face pressure from the US government; in 2011, a federal executive order required financial institutions to freeze yakuza assets, and as of 2013, the ] had frozen about US$55,000 of yakuza holdings, including two Japan-issued American Express cards.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-10-22/yazkuza-mobsters-whacked-by-regulators-freezing-amexs.html | work=Bloomberg | title=Yakuza Bosses Whacked by Regulators Freezing AmEx Cards}}</ref>

=== Current situation ===
The number of yakuza members and quasi-members fell by about 70 percent in the 30 years between 1990, before the anti-yakuza law, and 2020, after the anti-yakuza laws and the yakuza exclusion ordinances took effect.<ref name="nhk300622"/>

With the addition of the employer liability clause in the 2008 amendment to the Anti-yakuza law, there have been a number of situations in which yakuza bosses have been held liable for crimes committed by members of the yakuza. For example, in a civil case, the ] held the head of ] liable for a {{nihongo3|special fraud|特殊詐欺|]}} committed by members of Sumiyoshi-kai under the employer liability article of the Anti-yakuza law in 2021. As a result, Sumiyoshi-kai paid 652 million yen to the victims, 35 million yen more than the amount of damages.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.asahi.com/articles/ASP6M5DSMP6LUTIL07S.html|title=住吉会トップら6億円超支払う 詐欺被害上回る和解金|date=19 June 2021 |publisher=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220929230459/https://www.asahi.com/articles/ASP6M5DSMP6LUTIL07S.html|accessdate=11 May 2024|archive-date=29 September 2022}}</ref> In criminal cases, ] became the first {{nihongo|"designated yakuza"|指定暴力団|Shitei Bōryokudan}} boss to be ] under the employer liability clause on August 24, 2021. Nomura was involved in one murder and assaults of three people. The presiding judge Adachi Ben of the Fukuoka District Court characterized the murders as extremely vicious attacks.<ref name="satoru">{{cite web |title=Yakuza boss is first ever to be sentenced to death in Japan |website=The Japan Story |url=http://live56today.com/yakuza-boss-is-first-ever-to-be-sentenced-to-in-japan/ |date=August 24, 2021 |author=RJ Endra |archive-date=August 25, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210825122106/http://live56today.com/yakuza-boss-is-first-ever-to-be-sentenced-to-in-japan/ }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sankei.com/article/20210824-X2XRJM7NVZPJ7DRJVS6L3ES7AQ/|title=捜査幹部「画期的な判決」 他の暴力団に影響も|date=24 August 2021 |publisher=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211019175633/https://www.sankei.com/article/20210824-X2XRJM7NVZPJ7DRJVS6L3ES7AQ/|accessdate=11 May 2024|archive-date=19 October 2021}}</ref> On March 12, 2024, the Fukuoka High Court overturned Nomura's death sentence and downgraded it to life imprisonment. The High Court found him not guilty of murder.<ref>{{Cite news|title=Japanese high court overturns death sentence against yakuza gang leader |date=12 March 2024 |url=https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20240312_11/ |access-date=12 March 2024 |publisher=NHK |language=en}}</ref>

On top of the already staggering anti-yakuza legislation, Japan's younger generation may be less inclined to gang-related activity, as modern society has made it easier especially for young men to gain even semi-legitimate jobs such as ownership in bars and massage parlors and pornography that can be more profitable than gang affiliation all while protecting themselves by abiding by the strict anti-yakuza laws.<ref name="apjjf.org">{{Cite web |title=21st-Century Yakuza: Recent Trends in Organized Crime in Japan ~Part 1 21 ―― |url=https://apjjf.org/2012/10/7/Andrew-Rankin/3688/article.html |access-date=2022-04-01 |website=The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus}}</ref>

Citizens who take a stronger stance seem to also have taken action that does not lead to violent reactions from the yakuza. In Kyushu, although store owners initially were attacked by gang members, the region has reached stability after local business owners banned known yakuza and posted warnings against yakuza entering their premises.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Citizens battle Kudo-kai yakuza gang to take back their streets {{!}} The Asahi Shimbun: Breaking News, Japan News and Analysis |url=https://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/14429666 |access-date=2022-04-01 |website=The Asahi Shimbun |language=en}}</ref>

==Legacy==
{{Multiple issues|section=yes|
{{more citations needed|section|date=October 2023}}
{{original research|section|date=October 2023}}}}

=== Yakuza in society ===
The yakuza have had mixed relations with ]. Despite their pariah status, some of their actions may be perceived to have positive effects on society. For example, they stop other criminal organizations from acting in their areas of operation.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Yakuza's Impact On Japanese Society {{!}} ipl.org |url=https://www.ipl.org/essay/How-Did-Yakuza-Impact-Japans-Society-P3GMYJCK6JED6 |access-date=2022-10-13 |website=www.ipl.org}}</ref>{{unreliable source?|date=May 2023}} They have been known to provide relief in times of disaster. These actions have at times painted yakuza in a fairly positive light within Japan. The yakuza also attract membership from traditionally scorned minority groups, such as the ].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Martin |first1=Alexander |date=30 November 1999 |title=5 Things to Know About Japan's Yakuza |work=] |url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/BL-263B-5922 |access-date=19 April 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Gragert |first1=Lt. Bruce |date=25 August 2010 |title=Yakuza: The Warlords of Japanese Organized Crime |url=http://digitalcommons.law.ggu.edu/annlsurvey/vol4/iss1/9 |journal=Annual Survey of International & Comparative Law |volume=4 |issue=1 |access-date=19 April 2022}}</ref> However, gang wars and the use of violence as a tool have caused their approval to fall with the general public.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/03/09/where-have-japan-s-yakuza-gone | work=Daily Beast | title=Where Have Japan's Yakuza Gone?}}</ref> According to Jake Adelstein, one study found that 1 in 10 adults under the age of 40 believed that the yakuza should be allowed to exist.{{r|adelstein20110318}}

=== Film ===
{{Main|Yakuza film}}
] film '']'', a '']''-genre film]]

The yakuza have been in media and culture in many different fashions. Creating its own ] of movies within Japan's film industry, the portrayal of the yakuza mainly manifests in one of two archetypes; they are portrayed as either honorable and respectable men or as criminals who use fear and violence as their means of operation.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://japantoday.com/category/features/opinions/yakuza-kind-hearted-criminals-or-monsters-in-suits | work=Japan Today | title=Yakuza: Kind-hearted criminals or monsters in suits? | date=10 October 2012 | access-date=18 January 2019 }}</ref> Movies like '']'' and '']'' portray some of the members as violent criminals, with the focus being on the violence, while other movies focus more on the "business" side of the yakuza.

The 1992 film '']'', a satirical view of yakuza activities, resulted in retaliation against the director, as real-life yakuza gangsters attacked the director ] shortly after the release of the film.<ref>{{Cite web|title = Reposted: The high price of writing about anti-social forces – and those who pay. 猪狩先生を弔う日々 : Japan Subculture Research Center|url = http://www.japansubculture.com/the-high-price-of-writing-about-the-yakuza-and-those-who-pay/|website = japansubculture.com |date = 9 January 2015| access-date = 2016-01-05}}</ref>

Yakuza films have also been popular in the Western market with films such as the 1975 film '']'', the 1989 films '']'' and '']'', the 1995 film '']'', the 2005 film '']'', 2013's '']'', 2018 film '']'', and '']'' in 2021.

===Television===

The yakuza feature prominently in the 2015 American dystopian series '']''. They are also the basis for the 2019 BBC TV Series '']'', which features a character whose life is put in danger after he comes under suspicion for a murder tied to the yakuza. The 2022 ] series ] explores the dealings of the yakuza from the perspective of an American reporter ]. The anime series '']'' is a ] in which ] and yakuza culture are synonymous with one another.

=== Video games ===
The video game series ''],'' formerly known as ''Yakuza'' outside of Japan, launched in 2005, portrays the actions of several different ranking members of the yakuza, as well as criminal associates such as dirty cops and loan sharks. The series addresses some of the same themes as the yakuza genre of film does, like violence, honor, politics of the syndicates, and the social status of the yakuza in Japan. The series has been successful, spawning sequels, spin-offs, ] and a web TV series.

'']'' features a yakuza clan that assists the ] in the second and third act after they cut their ties with the ]. The yakuza derive most of their income from a casino, Kenji's, and are currently fighting to keep other gangs from peddling drugs in their territory while seeking to protect their activities from police interference. Towards the end of the third act, the player assassinates the leader of the clan, and the other members are later executed by Colombian gangsters. In ''Grand Theft Auto III''{{'s}} prequel, '']'', the yakuza play a major role in the storyline. In '']'', the yakuza are mentioned, presumably operating in Vice City.

'']'' features a mission set in Japan that sees Agent 47 assassinating the son of a wealthy arms dealer during his dinner meeting with a yakuza boss at his private estate. A mission in the 2016 game, '']'', set at a secluded mountaintop hospital, features a notorious yakuza lawyer and fixer as one of two targets to be assassinated.

=== Manga, anime and television dramas ===
* '']'': ] (1981–1983), ] (1983–1984). The story focuses on Kōsaku Sakamoto, a high school student who goes to live with yakuza boss Ibari Ōzora and his four children—Tsugumi, Tsubame, Hibari and Suzume—after the death of his mother. Kōsaku is shocked to learn that Hibari, who looks and behaves as a girl, is male.
* '']'': ] (2000), drama (2002, 2005 and 2008) and ] (2004). The heiress of a clan becomes a teacher in a difficult high school and is assigned a class of delinquents, the 3-D. She will teach them mathematics, while gradually getting involved in several other levels, going so far as to get her students out of a bad situation by sometimes using her skills as heir to the clan.
* '']'': ] (2001), drama (2002). A young gang leader, who seems to be too stupid to do his job, misses a big deal because he cannot count correctly, and on the other hand, is practically illiterate. In order to access the succession of the clan, his father then forces him to return to high school, to obtain his diploma. He must not reveal his membership in the yakuza, under penalty of being immediately excluded.
* '']'': manga of the ] genre (2011–?). Yashiro, a totally depraved masochist, boss of a yakuza clan and the Shinsei finance company, hires Chikara Dômeki, a secretive and not very talkative man, as his bodyguard. While Yashiro would like to take advantage of Dômeki's body, the latter is helpless.<ref>{{cite web|title= Serie –Twittering birds never fly|url=http://www.taifu-comics.com/index.php/serie/Twittering-birds-never-fly|website=taifu-comics.com|access-date=2015-10-10}}</ref>
* ''Like the Beast'': ], ] (2008). Tomoharu Ueda, a police officer in a small local post, meets Aki Gotôda, son of the leader of a yakuza clan, in pursuit of an underwear thief. The next morning, Aki shows up at his house to thank him for his help and finds himself making a declaration of love for him. Taken aback, Ueda replies that it is better that they get to know each other, but that's without counting Aki's stubbornness, ready to do anything to achieve his ends.
* '']'': ], ] (2021). A taxi driver becomes entangled in the rivalry of competing kobun and uses his position to undermine the local yakuza organization.

Several ] by ] are located in the middle of the Japanese underworld:
* '']'' (1990): Hôjô and Asami, childhood friends, have only one goal: to give the Japanese back a taste of life, and to shake up the country. For this, they decide to climb the ladder of power, one in the light, as a politician, the other in the shadows, as yakuza.
* '']'' (1999): Tatsumi Karasawa is the owner of a club in Tokyo who plans to expand his business. He gives a hard time not only to the police but also to the yakuza, of which he manages, however, to rally a certain number at his side.
* '']'' (2014): Nisekoi follows high school students Raku Ichijo, the son of a leader in the yakuza faction Shuei-gumi, and Chitoge Kirisaki, the daughter of a boss in a rival gang known as Muchi-Konkai.

== Yakuza-related terminology ==
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!English
!Japanese Rōmaji
|-
|association/society
| ''-kai''
|-
|behind-the-scenes fixer, godfather, or power broker (lit. "black curtain")
|''kuromaku''
|-
|boss (lit. "parent role")
|''oyabun''
|-
|gambler
|''bakuto''
|-
|gang/company
| ''-gumi''
|-
|hoodlum/ruffian
|''gurentai''
|-
|loan sharks (lit. "salary man financiers")
|''sarakin''
|-
|motorcycle gang
|''bōsōzoku''
|-
|nightclubs, bars, restaurants, etc. (lit. "water business")
|''mizu shōbai''
|-
|outcasts (by birth)
|''burakumin''
|-
|peddlers, street stall operators
|''tekiya''
|-
|ritual cutting of the joint of the little finger to atone for a mistake
|''yubitsume''
|-
|ritual sharing of sake to form a binding relationship; rooted in Shinto tradition
|''sakazuki''
|-
|underling (lit. "child role")
|''kobun''
|-
|violence group
|''bōryokudan''
|}

== See also ==
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
{{div col end}}
{{Portal bar|Japan}}

==References==
{{Reflist}}


==Videos== ==Bibliography==
{{Refbegin|2}}
*
* Bruno, A. (2007). "The Yakuza, the Japanese Mafia" CrimeLibrary: Time Warner
*
* Blancke, Stephan. ed. (2015). ''East Asian Intelligence and Organised Crime. China – Japan – North Korea – South Korea – Mongolia'' Berlin: Verlag Dr. Köster ({{ISBN|978-3895748882}})
*
* Kaplan, David, Dubro Alec. (1986). ''Yakuza'' Addison-Wesley ({{ISBN|0-201-11151-9}})
*
* Kaplan, David, Dubro Alec. (2003). ''Yakuza: Expanded Edition'' University of California Press ({{ISBN|0-520-21562-1}})
*
* Hill, Peter B.E. (2003). ''The Japanese Mafia: Yakuza, Law, and the State'' Oxford University Press ({{ISBN|0-19-925752-3}})
*
* Johnson, David T. (2001). ''The Japanese Way of Justice: Prosecuting Crime in Japan'' Oxford University Press ({{ISBN|0-19-511986-X}})
* ]. (2005) ''Toppamono: Outlaw. Radical. Suspect. My Life in Japan's Underworld'' Kotan Publishing ({{ISBN|0-9701716-2-5}})
* Seymour, Christopher. (1996). ''Yakuza Diary'' Atlantic Monthly Press ({{ISBN|0-87113-604-X}})
* Saga, Junichi., Bester, John. (1991) '']'' Kodansha America
* Schilling, Mark. (2003). ''The Yakuza Movie Book'' Stone Bridge Press ({{ISBN|1-880656-76-0}})
* Sterling, Claire. (1994). ''Thieves' World'' Simon & Schuster ({{ISBN|0-671-74997-8}})
* Sho Fumimura (Writer), Ryoichi Ikegami (Artist). (Series 1993–1997) "''Sanctuary''" Viz Communications Inc (Vol 1: {{ISBN|0-929279-97-2}}; Vol 2:{{ISBN|0-929279-99-9}}; Vol 3: {{ISBN|1-56931-042-4}}; Vol 4: {{ISBN|1-56931-039-4}}; Vol 5: {{ISBN|1-56931-112-9}}; Vol 6: {{ISBN|1-56931-199-4}}; Vol 7: {{ISBN|1-56931-184-6}}; Vol 8: {{ISBN|1-56931-207-9}}; Vol 9: {{ISBN|1-56931-235-4}})
* Tendo, Shoko (2007). ''Yakuza Moon: Memoirs of a Gangster's Daughter'' Kodansha International ({{ISBN|978-4-7700-3042-9}})
* ''Young Yakuza''. Dir. ]. ], 2007.
{{Refend}}


==External links== ==External links==
{{Commons category}}
*
* {{snd}}] <small>(Video)</small>
*
* {{snd}}] <small>(Video)</small>
*
*
*
* *
*
*
*
* {{PDFlink| |254&nbsp;]<!-- application/pdf, 260189 bytes -->}} — Manabu Miyazaki; ''Toppamono: Outlaw. Radical. Suspect. My Life in Japan's Underworld'' (], Kotan Publishing, ISBN 0-9701716-2-5)
*, CBS News, 17 April 2007 * ; CBS News, 17 April 2007
*
*


] {{Organized crime groups in Asia}}
{{Organized crime groups in America}}
]
{{Authority control}}
]


]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 09:58, 8 January 2025

Members of organized crime syndicates in Japan

For other uses, see Yakuza (disambiguation).

Criminal organization
Yakuza
The word yakuza in katakana (ヤクザ)
Founded17th century
(presumed to have originated from the Kabukimono)
TerritoryPrimarily Japan, particularly in Kantō/Tokyo, Kansai, Kyushu/Fukuoka, and Chūbu; also internationally in South Korea, Australia, the Western United States (Hawaii and California), and Thailand (Phuket)
EthnicityPrimarily Japanese; occasionally Koreans and Japanese Americans
Membership10,400 members
10,000 quasi-members
ActivitiesVaried, including illegitimate businesses, an array of criminal and non-criminal activities.
Notable membersPrincipal clans:
  1. Yamaguchi-gumi
  2. Sumiyoshi-kai
  3. Inagawa-kai

Yakuza (Japanese: ヤクザ, IPA: [jaꜜkɯdza]; English: /jəˈkuːzə, ˈjækuːzə/), also known as gokudō (極道, "the extreme path", IPA: [gokɯꜜdoː]), are members of transnational organized crime syndicates originating in Japan. The Japanese police and media (by request of the police) call them bōryokudan (暴力団, "violent groups", IPA: [boːɾʲokɯꜜdaɴ]), while the yakuza call themselves ninkyō dantai (任侠団体, "chivalrous organizations", IPA: [ɲiŋkʲoː dantai]). The English equivalent for the term yakuza is gangster, meaning an individual involved in a Mafia-like criminal organization.

The yakuza are known for their strict codes of conduct, their organized fiefdom nature, and several unconventional ritual practices such as yubitsume, or amputation of the left little finger. Members are often portrayed as males with heavily tattooed bodies and wearing fundoshi, sometimes with a kimono or, in more recent years, a Western-style "sharp" suit covering them.

At their height, the yakuza maintained a large presence in the Japanese media, and they also operated internationally. In 1963, the number of yakuza members and quasi-members reached a peak of 184,100. However, this number has drastically dropped, a decline attributed to changing market opportunities and several legal and social developments in Japan that discourage the growth of yakuza membership. In 1991, it had 63,800 members and 27,200 quasi-members, but by 2023 it had only 10,400 members and 10,000 quasi-members. The yakuza are aging because young people do not readily join, and their average age at the end of 2022 was 54.2 years: 5.4% in their 20s, 12.9% in their 30s, 26.3% in their 40s, 30.8% in their 50s, 12.5% in their 60s, and 11.6% in their 70s or older, with more than half of the members in their 50s or older.

The yakuza still regularly engage in an array of criminal activities, and many Japanese citizens remain fearful of the threat these individuals pose to their safety. There remains no strict prohibition on yakuza membership in Japan today, although many pieces of legislation have been passed by the Japanese government aimed at impeding revenue and increasing liability for criminal activities.

Etymology

The name yakuza originates from the traditional Japanese card game Oicho-Kabu, a game in which the goal is to draw three cards adding up to a score of 9. If the sum of the cards is 10 or more, the second digit is the score. So a sum of 13 is a score of 3, a sum of 14 is a score of 4, etc. A sum of 10 or 20 is a score of 0. If the three cards drawn are 8-9-3 (pronounced ya-ku-za in archaic Japanese), the sum is 20 and therefore the score is zero, making one of the worst possible hands that can be drawn. In Japanese, the word yakuza is commonly written in katakana (ヤクザ).

Origins

A yakuza with a dragon tattoo is running to help his comrade, who is fighting against the police.
Yakuza boss Shimizu Jirocho (Chogoro Yamamoto)

Despite uncertainty about the single origin of yakuza organizations, most modern yakuza derive from two social classifications which emerged in the mid-Edo period (1603–1868): tekiya, those who primarily peddled illicit, stolen or shoddy goods; and bakuto, those who were involved in or participated in gambling.

Tekiya (peddlers) ranked as one of the lowest social groups during the Edo period. As they began to form organizations of their own, they took over some administrative duties relating to commerce, such as stall allocation and protection of their commercial activities. During Shinto festivals, these peddlers opened stalls and some members were hired to act as security. Each peddler paid rent in exchange for a stall assignment and protection during the fair.

The tekiya were a highly structured and hierarchical group with the oyabun (boss) at the top and kobun (gang members) at the bottom. This hierarchy resembles a structure similar to the family – in traditional Japanese culture, the oyabun was often regarded as a surrogate father, and the kobun as surrogate children. During the Edo period, the government formally recognized the tekiya. At this time, within the tekiya, the oyabun were appointed as supervisors and granted near-samurai status, meaning they were allowed the dignity of a surname and two swords.

Bakuto (gamblers) had a much lower social standing even than traders, as gambling was illegal. Many small gambling houses cropped up in abandoned temples or shrines at the edges of towns and villages all over Japan. Most of these gambling houses ran loan-sharking businesses for clients, and they usually maintained their own security personnel. Society at large regarded the gambling houses themselves, as well as the bakuto, with disdain. Much of the undesirable image of the yakuza originates from bakuto; this includes the name yakuza itself.

Because of the economic situation during the mid-Edo period and the predominance of the merchant class, developing yakuza groups were composed of misfits and delinquents who had joined or formed the groups to extort customers in local markets by selling fake or shoddy goods.

Shimizu Jirocho (1820–1893) is Japan's most famous yakuza and folk hero. He was born Chogoro Yamamoto, but changed his name when he was adopted, a common Japanese practice. His life and exploits were featured in sixteen films between 1911 and 1940.

The roots of the yakuza survive today in initiation ceremonies, which incorporate tekiya or bakuto rituals. Although the modern Yakuza has diversified, some gangs still identify with one group or the other; for example, a gang whose primary source of income is illegal gambling may refer to themselves as bakuto.

Kyushu

Kyushu, a well-known source of many yakuza members

The island of Kyushu (and particularly its northern prefecture Fukuoka) has a reputation for being a large source of yakuza members, including many renowned bosses in the Yamaguchi-gumi. Isokichi Yoshida (1867–1936) from the Kitakyushu area was considered by some scholars and political watchers as one of the first renowned modern yakuza. Recently Shinobu Tsukasa and Kunio Inoue, the bosses of the two most powerful clans in the Yamaguchi-gumi, originate from Kyushu. Fukuoka, the northernmost part of the island, has the largest number of designated syndicates among all of the prefectures.

Organization and activities

Structure

A simplified organizational chart of the Yakuza. At the top of the image is oyabun (kumichō, 組長), the pseudo-father of the organization; to the lower right of oyabun are oyabun's pseudo younger brothers shatei (舎弟), and directly below oyabun is wakagashira (若頭), oyabun's pseudo first son. Below wakagashira are kumiin (組員), pseudo younger brothers of wakagashira who are pseudo children of oyabun, and they are called wakanaka or wakashū. Kumiin can refer to any member of the organization, regardless of position.
Large yakuza organizations have a multi-layered structure, with executives and members running their own organizations.

During the formation of the yakuza, they adopted the traditional Japanese hierarchical structure of oyabun-kobun where kobun (子分; lit. foster child) owe their allegiance to the oyabun (親分, lit. foster parent). In a much later period, the code of jingi (仁義, justice and duty) was developed where loyalty and respect are a way of life. The oyabun-kobun relationship is formalized by ceremonial sharing of sake from a single cup. This ritual is not exclusive to the yakuza – it is also commonly performed in traditional Japanese Shinto weddings, and may have been a part of sworn brotherhood relationships.

The structure of yakuza organizations is characterized by a multi-layered hierarchical structure. The kobun (pseudo child) of an organization become oyabun (family head and pseudo parent) and run their own subsidiary organizations, and the kobun of the subsidiary organizations also become oyabun and run their own subsidiary organizations. A large yakuza organization such as Yamaguchi-gumi is made up of five or six layered organizations. In other words, the heads of subsidiary organizations are often executives of the parent organizations.

The oyabun of the organization is generally called a kumichō (組長) or kaichō (会長, chairman), the person corresponding to pseudo younger brother of the kumichō is called a shatei (舎弟), and the person corresponding to pseudo child of the kumichō (kobun) is called a wakanaka (若中) or wakashū (若衆). Shatei (舎弟) means younger brother, and its status varies greatly depending on whose brother it is. From the perspective of the organization as a whole, shatei generally refers to the younger brother of an oyabun, and thus to a high-ranking person in the organization, but it is also possible for a lower-level member to refer to his pseudo younger brother as a shatei.

Although positions in yakuza organizations vary from clan to clan, the three most important yakuza positions are kumichō, wakagashira (若頭, second-in-command and pseudo eldest son of the kumichō), and shateigashira (舎弟頭, pseudo oldest younger brother of the kumichō). Honbuchō (本部長, general manager), fuku-kumichō (副組長, deputy kumichō), and jimukyokuchō (事務局長, secretary general), are also important positions. In general, the shikkōbu (執行部, executive office) of an organization is run by the wakagashira, shateigashira, and honbuchō. Since the shatei are the pseudo-younger brothers of the kumichō, they are generally older and have higher nominal positions but relatively little real authority. In the Yamaguchi-gumi pecking order as of 2024, the order is kumichō, wakagashira, shateigashira, and honbuchō.

Yakuza groups are headed by an oyabun (kumichō or kaichō) who gives orders to his subordinates, the kobun. In this respect, the organization is a variation of the traditional Japanese senpai-kōhai (senior-junior) model. Members of yakuza cut their real family ties and transfer their loyalty to the oyabun. They refer to each other as family members—oyaji (親父, fathers), ojiki (叔父貴, uncles), and kyōdai (兄弟, elder and younger brothers). Among brothers, it is common to refer to a person equal to oneself as kyōdai, a younger brother as kyōdai or shatei, and an older brother as aniki (兄貴, older broher). The yakuza is populated almost entirely by men and the very few women who are acknowledged are the wives of bosses, who are referred to by the title ane-san (姐さん, older sister). When the 3rd Yamaguchi-gumi boss (Kazuo Taoka) died in the early 1980s, his wife (Fumiko) took over as boss of Yamaguchi-gumi, albeit for a short time.

During the World War II period in Japan, the more traditional tekiya/bakuto form of organization declined as the entire population was mobilised to participate in the war effort and society came under the control of the strict military government. However, after the war, the Yakuza adapted again.

Rituals

An early example of irezumi tattoos, 1870s

Yubitsume, also referred to as otoshimae, or the cutting off of one's finger, is a form of penance or apology. Upon a first offence, the transgressor must cut off the tip of his left little finger and give the severed portion to his boss. Sometimes an underboss may do this in penance to the oyabun if he wants to spare a member of his own gang from further retaliation. This practice has started to wane amongst the younger members, due to it being an easy identifier for police.

Its origin stems from the traditional way of holding a Japanese sword. The bottom three fingers of each hand are used to grip the sword tightly, with the thumb and index fingers slightly loose. The removal of digits starting with the little finger and moving up the hand to the index finger progressively weakens a person's sword grip.

The idea is that a person with a weak sword grip then has to rely more on the group for protection—reducing individual action. In recent years, prosthetic fingertips have been developed to disguise this distinctive appearance.

Many yakuza have full-body tattoos (including their genitalia). These tattoos, known as irezumi in Japan, are still often "hand-poked", that is, the ink is inserted beneath the skin using non-electrical, hand-made, and handheld tools with needles of sharpened bamboo or steel. The procedure is expensive and painful, and can take years to complete.

When yakuza play Oicho-Kabu cards with each other, they often remove their shirts or open them up and drape them around their waists. This enables them to display their full-body tattoos to each other. This is one of the few times that yakuza display their tattoos to others, as they normally keep them concealed in public with long-sleeved and high-necked shirts. When new members join, they are often required to remove their trousers as well and reveal any lower body tattoos.

Syndicates

Further information: List of Yakuza syndicates

Number of members and quasi-members

The total number of yakuza members and quasi-members peaked at 184,100 in 1963, and then continued to decline due to police crackdowns. The number of regular members decreased with the implementation of the Act on Prevention of Unjust Acts by Organized Crime Group Members (暴力団員による不当な行為の防止等に関する法律) in 1992, and the total number of members and quasi-members began to decline rapidly with the implementation of the yakuza exclusion ordinances in all 47 prefectures around 2010. Between 1990 and 2020, the total number of members and quasi-members decreased by 70 percent.

The National Police Agency reported that Japanese yakuza organizations had 10,400 members and 10,000 quasi-members in 2023.

Designated yakuza (Shitei Bōryokudan)

A designated yakuza (指定暴力団, Shitei Bōryokudan) is a "particularly harmful" yakuza group registered by the Prefectural Public Safety Commissions under the Act on Prevention of Unjust Acts by Organized Crime Group Members (暴力団対策法, Bōryokudan Taisaku Hō) enacted in 1991. Groups are designated as Shitei Bōryokudan (designated yakuza) if their members take advantage of the gang's influence to do business, are structured to have one leader, and have a large portion of their members hold criminal records. After the Act on Prevention of Unjust Acts by Organized Crime Group Members was enacted, many yakuza syndicates made efforts to restructure to appear more professional and legitimate.

As of 2023, Under the Act on Prevention of Unjust Acts by Organized Crime Group Members, the Prefectural Public Safety Commissions have registered 25 syndicates as the designated yakuza groups. Three of these organizations have more than 1,000 regular members, eight have more than 100, and 14 have less than 100. Fukuoka Prefecture has the largest number of designated yakuza groups among all of the prefectures, at 5; the Kudo-kai, the Taishu-kai, the Fukuhaku-kai, the Dojin-kai, and the Namikawa-kai.

In August 2021, the Fukuoka District Court sentenced Satoru Nomura, the fifth head of Kudo-kai, to death for murder and attempted murder. This was the first death sentence handed down to a designated yakuza head. Kudo-kai is the only one of the designated yakuza to be designated as a especially dangerous designated yakuza (特定危険指定暴力団, Tokutei Kiken Shitei Bōryokudan), a more dangerous type of yakuza.

Three largest syndicates and six major syndicates

As of 2023, the National Police Agency has designated Yamaguchi-gumi, Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi, Kizuna-kai, Ikeda-gumi (ja), Sumiyoshi-kai, and Inagawa-kai as Shuyō dantai (主要団体, major organizations) among the designated yakuza. These six organizations have a total of 7,700 members and 6,800 quasi-members, for a total of 14,500 members, or 71.1 percent of the total 20,400 yakuza members and quasi-members in Japan.

Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi split off from Yamaguchi-gumi in August 2015, Kizuna-kai split off from Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi in April 2017, and Ikeda-gumi split off from Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi in July 2020. These Yamaguchi-gumi and the three organizations that split from them are fighting each other.

In recent years, the three major yakuza syndicates have formed a loose alliance, and in April 2023, Kiyoshi Takayama, the wakagashira (second-in-command) of the Yamaguchi-gumi, Shuji Ogawa, the kaichō (chairman) of the Sumiyoshi-kai, and Kazuya Uchibori (ja), the kaichō of the Inagawa-kai, held a social gathering.

Principal families Description Mon (crest)
Yamaguchi-gumi (山口組) The Yamaguchi-gumi is the largest yakuza family, accounting for 30% of all yakuza in Japan, with 3,500 members and 3,800 quasi-members as of 2023. From its headquarters in Kobe, it directs criminal activities throughout Japan. It is also involved in operations in Asia and the United States. Shinobu Tsukasa, also known as Kenichi Shinoda, is the Yamaguchi-gumi's current oyabun. He follows an expansionist policy and has increased operations in Tokyo (which has not traditionally been the territory of the Yamaguchi-gumi.)

One of the best-known bosses of the Yamaguchi-gumi was Kazuo Taoka, the "Godfather of all Godfathers", who was responsible for the syndicate's massive growth and success during the 20th century.

"Yamabishi" (山菱)

Sumiyoshi-kai (住吉会) The Sumiyoshi-kai is the second-largest yakuza family, with an estimated 2,200 members and 1,300 quasi-members as of 2023. Sumiyoshi-kai is a confederation of smaller yakuza groups. Its current head (会長 kai-cho) is Shūji Ogawa. Structurally, Sumiyoshi-kai differs from its principal rival, the Yamaguchi-gumi, in that it functions like a federation. The chain of command is more relaxed, and its leadership is distributed among several other members.
Inagawa-kai (稲川会) The Inagawa-kai is the third-largest yakuza family in Japan, with roughly 1,700 members and 1,200 quasi-members as of 2023. It is based in the Tokyo-Yokohama area and was one of the first yakuza families to expand its operations outside of Japan.

Current activities

Japan

In the 2010s and 2020s, the yakuza's main source of funding is a fraud called tokushu sagi (特殊詐欺, special fraud), which mainly targets the elderly to cheat them out of large amounts of money. Their methods include calling the homes of elderly people to beg for money by pretending to be the elderly person's son, or visiting the homes of elderly people posing as employees of financial institutions to swindle them out of their money. In 2014, tokushu sagi accounted for 10.4 percent of all yakuza arrests, surpassing theft for the first time at 10.2 percent, and 34.6 percent of tokushu sagi perpetrators were yakuza and their associates. The total damage from tokushu sagi identified in 2019 exceeded 30 billion yen, and while yakuza accounted for just over 10 percent of the lowest level members of criminal groups, such as cash receivers who play the role of financial institution employees, yakuza accounted for nearly 40 percent of the main perpetrators leading fraud schemes.

The yakuza and its affiliated gangs control drug trafficking in Japan, especially methamphetamine. While many yakuza syndicates, notably the Yamaguchi-gumi, officially forbid their members from engaging in drug trafficking, some other yakuza syndicates, like the Dojin-kai, are heavily involved in it. The most common charge for yakuza and their associates arrested in 2014 was violation of the Stimulants Control Act (覚せい剤取締法), which prohibits the import, export, sale, transfer, possession, and use of methamphetamine, accounting for 26.5 percent of arrests.

Some yakuza groups are known to deal extensively in human trafficking. In the Philippines Yakuza trick girls from impoverished villages into coming to Japan by promising them respectable jobs with good wages. Instead, they are forced into becoming sex workers and strippers.

The Kabukicho district of Shinjuku has historically been known as a popular yakuza hangout in Tokyo.

Yakuza frequently engaged in a unique form of Japanese extortion known as sōkaiya. In essence, this is a specialized form of protection racket. Instead of harassing small businesses, the Yakuza harass a stockholders' meeting of a larger corporation. Yakuza operatives obtain the right to attend by making a small purchase of stock, and then at the meeting physically intimidate other stockholders. The number of sōkaiya has decreased over the years, and in 2023 there were only about 150 sōkaiya, of whom 30 worked in groups and 120 worked alone.

Yakuza also had ties to the Japanese real estate market and banking sector through jiageya. Jiageya specializes in inducing holders of small real estate to sell their property so that estate companies can carry out much larger development plans. The Japanese bubble economy of the 1980s is often blamed on real estate speculation by banking subsidiaries. After the collapse of the property bubble, a manager of a major bank in Nagoya was assassinated, prompting much speculation about the banking industry's indirect connection to the Japanese underworld.

Yakuza often take part in local festivals such as Sanja Matsuri where they often ride the shrine through the streets proudly showing off their elaborate tattoos.

In 1989, Susumu Ishii, the Oyabun of the Inagawa-kai (a well-known yakuza group) bought US$255 million worth of Tokyo Kyuko Electric Railway's stock. Japan's Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission has knowledge of more than 50 listed companies with ties to organized crime, and in March 2008, the Osaka Securities Exchange decided to review all listed companies and expel those with yakuza ties.

Yakuza involvement in politics functions similarly to that of a lobbying group, with them backing those who share in their opinions or beliefs.

Yakuza's aid in earthquakes

In the wake of the 1995 Kobe earthquake, the Yamaguchi-gumi yakuza group, who are based in the area, mobilized to provide disaster relief services (including the use of a helicopter). Media reports contrasted this rapid response with the much slower pace at which the Japanese government's official relief efforts took place.

Following the Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami on 11 March 2011, the yakuza sent hundreds of trucks filled with food, water, blankets, and sanitary accessories to aid the people in the affected areas of the natural disaster. CNN México said that although the yakuza operates through extortion and other violent methods, they " swiftly and quietly to provide aid to those most in need."

United States

The presence of individuals affiliated with the yakuza in the United States has increased tremendously since the 1960s, and although much of their activity is concentrated in Hawaii, they have made their presence known in other parts of the country, especially in Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area, as well as Seattle, Las Vegas, Arizona, Virginia, Chicago, and New York City. The yakuza are said to use Hawaii as a midway station between Japan and mainland America, smuggling methamphetamine into the country and smuggling firearms back to Japan. They easily fit into the local population, since many tourists from Japan and other Asian countries visit the islands on a regular basis, and there is a large population of residents who are of full or partial Japanese descent. They also work with local gangs, funneling Japanese tourists to gambling parlors and brothels.

In California, the yakuza have made alliances with local Korean gangs as well as Chinese triads and Vietnamese gangs. The yakuza identified these gangs as useful partners due to the constant stream of Vietnamese cafe shoot-outs and home invasion burglaries throughout the 1980s and early 1990s. In New York City, they appear to collect finder's fees from Russian, Irish and Italian gang members and businessmen for guiding Japanese tourists to gambling establishments, both legal and illegal.

Handguns manufactured in the US account for a large share (33%) of handguns seized in Japan, followed by handguns manufactured in China (16%) and in the Philippines (10%). In 1990, a Smith & Wesson .38 caliber revolver that cost $275 in the US could sell for up to $4,000 in Tokyo.

In 2001, the FBI's representative in Tokyo arranged for Tadamasa Goto, the head of the group Goto-gumi, to receive a liver transplant at the UCLA Medical Center in the United States, in return for information of Yamaguchi-gumi operations in the US. This was done without prior consultation of the NPA. The journalist who uncovered the deal received threats from Goto and was given police protection in the US and in Japan.

The FBI suspects that the yakuza were using various operations to launder money in the US as of 2008.

Asia (outside Japan)

The yakuza have engaged in illegal activities in Southeast Asia since the 1960s; they are working there to develop sex tourism and drug trafficking. This is the area where they are still the most active today.

In addition to their presence in Southeast Asian countries such as Thailand, the Philippines, and Vietnam, yakuza groups also operate in South Korea, China, Taiwan, and in the Pacific Islands (mainly Hawaii).

Yakuza groups also have a presence in North Korea; in 2009, yakuza Yoshiaki Sawada was released from a North Korean prison after spending five years there attempting to bribe a North Korean official and smuggle drugs.

Constituent members

Prospective yakuza come from all walks of life. The most romantic tales tell how yakuza accept sons who have been abandoned or exiled by their parents. Many yakuza start out in junior high school or high school as common street thugs or members of bōsōzoku gangs. Perhaps because of its lower socio-economic status, numerous yakuza members come from burakumin and ethnic Korean backgrounds. Low-ranking youth may be referred to as chinpira or chimpira.

According to a 2006 speech by Mitsuhiro Suganuma, a former officer of the Public Security Intelligence Agency, around 60 percent of yakuza members come from burakumin, the descendants of a feudal outcast class and approximately 30 percent of yauza are Japanese-born Koreans, and only 10 percent are from non-burakumin Japanese and Chinese ethnic groups.

Burakumin

The burakumin is a group that Japanese society socially discriminates against, and its recorded history goes back to the Heian period in the 11th century. The burakumin are the descendants of outcast communities which originated in the pre-modern, especially the feudal era, mainly those people with occupations which are considered tainted because they are associated with death or ritual impurity, such as butchers, executioners, undertakers, or leather workers. They traditionally lived in their own secluded hamlets and villages away from other groups.

According to David E. Kaplan and Alec Dubro, burakumin account for about 70% of the members of Yamaguchi-gumi, the largest yakuza syndicate in Japan.

Ethnic Koreans

While ethnic Koreans make up only 0.5% of the Japanese population, they are a prominent part of yakuza because they suffer discrimination in Japanese society along with the burakumin. In the early 1990s, 18 of 90 top bosses of Inagawa-kai were ethnic Koreans. The Japanese National Police Agency suggested Koreans composed 10% of the yakuza proper. Some of the representatives of the designated Bōryokudan are also Koreans. The Korean significance had been an untouchable taboo in Japan and one of the reasons that the Japanese version of Kaplan and Dubro's Yakuza (1986) had not been published until 1991 with the deletion of Korean-related descriptions of the Yamaguchi-gumi.

Japanese-born people of Korean ancestry who retain South Korean nationality are considered resident aliens and are embraced by the yakuza precisely because they fit the group's "outsider" image.

Notable yakuza of Korean ancestry include Hisayuki Machii the founder of the Tosei-kai, Tokutaro Takayama the head of the 4th-generation Aizukotetsu-kai, Jiro Kiyota (1940–) the head of the 5th-generation Inagawa-kai, Shinichi Matsuyama (1927–) the head of the 5th-generation Kyokuto-kai and Hirofumi Hashimoto (1947–) the founder of the Kyokushinrengo-kai (affiliated with Yamaguchi-gumi, dissolved in 2019).

Law enforcement and indirect enforcement

Operation Summit

Between 1964 and 1965, the Japanese police carried out mass arrests of yakuza leaders and executives in what they called the Daiichiji chōjō sakusen (第一次頂上作戦, First Operation Summit) in response to public demands for the yakuza to be banished from society. As a result, crime declined and the number of arrested yakuza fell from about 59,000 in 1964 to 38,000 in 1967. The number of yakuza organizations and members also declined, from 5,216 organizations and 184,091 members in 1963 to 3,500 organizations and 139,089 members in 1969. As a result, 1963, the year before the First Operation Summit was launched, was the peak of yakuza power.

From around 1970, yakuza leaders and executives who had been imprisoned began to be released from prison, and yakuza organizations that had been disbanded during the First Operation Summit were revived and reorganized, leading the police to conduct the Second Operation Summit in 1970 and the Third Operation Summit in 1975. These series of police crackdowns led to a decline in the number of yakuza organizations and members, from 2957 organizations with 123,044 members in 1972 to 2517 organizations with 106,754 members in 1979. As a result, small yakuza organizations were forced to dissolve, and the total number of members decreased, but some members transferred to large yakuza organizations, so the number of members of large organizations actually increased during this period. The three major organizations, Yamaguchi-gumi, Sumiyoshi-kai, and Inagawa-kai, expanded during this period. During this period, Japan was in a recession following the energy crisis of the 1970s, and it became difficult for the yakuza to acquire sufficient financial resources through traditional methods alone, so it was inevitable that they would consolidate into large yakuza organizations with diverse or legal sources of funding.

Anti-yakuza laws

The Act on Prevention of Unjust Acts by Organized Crime Group Members (暴力団員による不当な行為の防止等に関する法律), passed in 1991 and enacted in 1992, was a landmark piece of legislation that cracked down on the yakuza. The law prohibited 27 acts by yakuza, including demanding hush money or donations, collecting debts and conducting land grabbing activities in an unjustified manner. The law also made it illegal to demand and collect so-called mikajime-ryō (みかじめ料, Protection racket) from downtown restaurants and bars, which were the yakuza's main source of funding. Police could issue two cease-and-desist orders to offenders who demanded mikajime-ryō, and could arrest offenders who still refused to comply. Until then, the yakuza had charged bouncer fees to restaurants and bars in their territory, especially those open at night, and made various threats, such as ramming dump trucks into businesses that refused, and business owners, fearing reprisals, had paid mikajime-ryō, but the new law resulted in more businesses refusing mikajime-ryō and the yakuza's financial resources were lost. In 1991, the yakuza had 63,800 members, but by 1992, when the new law took effect, the number had dropped sharply to about 56,600, then to about 48,000 in 1994 and 43,100 in 2001.

Additional regulations can be found in a 2008 anti-yakuza amendment which allows prosecutors to place the blame on any yakuza-related crime on crime bosses. Specifically, the leader of the Yamaguchi-gumi has since been incarcerated and forced to pay upwards of 85 million yen in damages of several crimes committed by his gangsters, leading to the yakuza's dismissal of around 2,000 members per year; albeit, some analysts claim that these dismissals are part of the yakuza's collective attempt to regain a better reputation amongst the populace. Regardless, the yakuza's culture, too, has shifted towards a more secretive and far less public approach to crime, as many of their traditions have been reduced or erased to avoid being identified as yakuza.

Beginning in 2009, led by agency chief Takaharu Ando, Japanese police began to crack down on the gangs. Yamaguchi-gumi's number two and Kodo-kai chief Kiyoshi Takayama was arrested in late 2010. In December 2010, police arrested Yamaguchi-gumi's alleged number three leader, Tadashi Irie.

Yakuza exclusion ordinances

In addition to the anti-yakuza laws, the Yakuza exclusion ordinances enacted by each of Japan's 47 prefectures between 2009 and 2011 also contributed significantly to the decline of the yakuza. Ordinances were enacted in Osaka and Tokyo in 2010 and 2011 to try to combat yakuza influence by making it illegal for any business to do business with the yakuza. While the anti-yakuza laws prohibited the yakuza from making unreasonable demands on businesses and citizens, these ordinances prohibited businesses and citizens from offering benefits to the yakuza. This made it increasingly difficult for the yakuza to raise funds, as fewer businesses and citizens succumbed to the yakuza's threats and offered benefits to the yakuza, such as contracting work or paying money to the yakuza. According to the media, encouraged by tougher anti-yakuza laws and yakuza exclusion ordinances, local governments and construction companies have begun to shun or ban yakuza activities or involvement in their communities or construction projects.

In addition, these ordinances have made it difficult for yakuza members to lead normal civilian lives. The ordinances also require businesses and citizens to refuse to rent meeting rooms or parking spaces to the yakuza, or to print business cards with the name of yakuza organizations on them. Companies can now also refuse to open bank accounts, sign mobile phone contracts, credit card contracts, lease real estate, or process various loans for people identified as yakuza under the anti-yakuza laws, making it more difficult for yakuza to live in society. Even companies that provide lifelines have become tough on the yakuza, with Osaka Gas terminating contracts if a contractor is discovered to be a yakuza. To prevent yakuza from nominally leaving the organization and signing contracts with companies, these ordinances allow companies to treat a person as a yakuza for five years even if he or she has nominally left the yakuza and become a civilian.

Since 2011, regulations outlawing business with yakuza members, government-ordered audits of yakuza finances, and the enactment of yakuza exclusion ordinances have hastened a decline in yakuza membership. The number of yakuza members and quasi-members fell from 78,600 in 2010 to 25,900 in 2020.

Outside Japan

Yakuza organizations also face pressure from the US government; in 2011, a federal executive order required financial institutions to freeze yakuza assets, and as of 2013, the U.S. Treasury Department had frozen about US$55,000 of yakuza holdings, including two Japan-issued American Express cards.

Current situation

The number of yakuza members and quasi-members fell by about 70 percent in the 30 years between 1990, before the anti-yakuza law, and 2020, after the anti-yakuza laws and the yakuza exclusion ordinances took effect.

With the addition of the employer liability clause in the 2008 amendment to the Anti-yakuza law, there have been a number of situations in which yakuza bosses have been held liable for crimes committed by members of the yakuza. For example, in a civil case, the Tokyo High Court held the head of Sumiyoshi-kai liable for a tokushu sagi (特殊詐欺, special fraud) committed by members of Sumiyoshi-kai under the employer liability article of the Anti-yakuza law in 2021. As a result, Sumiyoshi-kai paid 652 million yen to the victims, 35 million yen more than the amount of damages. In criminal cases, Nomura Satoru became the first "designated yakuza" (指定暴力団, Shitei Bōryokudan) boss to be sentenced to death under the employer liability clause on August 24, 2021. Nomura was involved in one murder and assaults of three people. The presiding judge Adachi Ben of the Fukuoka District Court characterized the murders as extremely vicious attacks. On March 12, 2024, the Fukuoka High Court overturned Nomura's death sentence and downgraded it to life imprisonment. The High Court found him not guilty of murder.

On top of the already staggering anti-yakuza legislation, Japan's younger generation may be less inclined to gang-related activity, as modern society has made it easier especially for young men to gain even semi-legitimate jobs such as ownership in bars and massage parlors and pornography that can be more profitable than gang affiliation all while protecting themselves by abiding by the strict anti-yakuza laws.

Citizens who take a stronger stance seem to also have taken action that does not lead to violent reactions from the yakuza. In Kyushu, although store owners initially were attacked by gang members, the region has reached stability after local business owners banned known yakuza and posted warnings against yakuza entering their premises.

Legacy

This section has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Yakuza" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
This section possibly contains original research. Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations. Statements consisting only of original research should be removed. (October 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
(Learn how and when to remove this message)

Yakuza in society

The yakuza have had mixed relations with Japanese society. Despite their pariah status, some of their actions may be perceived to have positive effects on society. For example, they stop other criminal organizations from acting in their areas of operation. They have been known to provide relief in times of disaster. These actions have at times painted yakuza in a fairly positive light within Japan. The yakuza also attract membership from traditionally scorned minority groups, such as the Korean-Japanese. However, gang wars and the use of violence as a tool have caused their approval to fall with the general public. According to Jake Adelstein, one study found that 1 in 10 adults under the age of 40 believed that the yakuza should be allowed to exist.

Film

Main article: Yakuza film
Poster for the 1948 Akira Kurosawa film Drunken Angel, a yakuza eiga-genre film

The yakuza have been in media and culture in many different fashions. Creating its own genre of movies within Japan's film industry, the portrayal of the yakuza mainly manifests in one of two archetypes; they are portrayed as either honorable and respectable men or as criminals who use fear and violence as their means of operation. Movies like Battles Without Honor and Humanity and Dead or Alive portray some of the members as violent criminals, with the focus being on the violence, while other movies focus more on the "business" side of the yakuza.

The 1992 film Minbo, a satirical view of yakuza activities, resulted in retaliation against the director, as real-life yakuza gangsters attacked the director Juzo Itami shortly after the release of the film.

Yakuza films have also been popular in the Western market with films such as the 1975 film The Yakuza, the 1989 films Black Rain and The Punisher, the 1995 film Johnny Mnemonic, the 2005 film Into the Sun, 2013's The Wolverine, 2018 film The Outsider, and Snake Eyes in 2021.

Television

The yakuza feature prominently in the 2015 American dystopian series The Man in the High Castle. They are also the basis for the 2019 BBC TV Series Giri/Haji, which features a character whose life is put in danger after he comes under suspicion for a murder tied to the yakuza. The 2022 HBO Max series Tokyo Vice explores the dealings of the yakuza from the perspective of an American reporter Jake Adelstein. The anime series Akiba Maid War is a dark comedic parody in which maid cafés and yakuza culture are synonymous with one another.

Video games

The video game series Like A Dragon, formerly known as Yakuza outside of Japan, launched in 2005, portrays the actions of several different ranking members of the yakuza, as well as criminal associates such as dirty cops and loan sharks. The series addresses some of the same themes as the yakuza genre of film does, like violence, honor, politics of the syndicates, and the social status of the yakuza in Japan. The series has been successful, spawning sequels, spin-offs, a live-action movie and a web TV series.

Grand Theft Auto III features a yakuza clan that assists the protagonist in the second and third act after they cut their ties with the Mafia. The yakuza derive most of their income from a casino, Kenji's, and are currently fighting to keep other gangs from peddling drugs in their territory while seeking to protect their activities from police interference. Towards the end of the third act, the player assassinates the leader of the clan, and the other members are later executed by Colombian gangsters. In Grand Theft Auto III's prequel, Grand Theft Auto: Liberty City Stories, the yakuza play a major role in the storyline. In Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, the yakuza are mentioned, presumably operating in Vice City.

Hitman 2: Silent Assassin features a mission set in Japan that sees Agent 47 assassinating the son of a wealthy arms dealer during his dinner meeting with a yakuza boss at his private estate. A mission in the 2016 game, Hitman, set at a secluded mountaintop hospital, features a notorious yakuza lawyer and fixer as one of two targets to be assassinated.

Manga, anime and television dramas

  • Stop!! Hibari-kun!: manga (1981–1983), anime (1983–1984). The story focuses on Kōsaku Sakamoto, a high school student who goes to live with yakuza boss Ibari Ōzora and his four children—Tsugumi, Tsubame, Hibari and Suzume—after the death of his mother. Kōsaku is shocked to learn that Hibari, who looks and behaves as a girl, is male.
  • Gokusen: manga (2000), drama (2002, 2005 and 2008) and anime (2004). The heiress of a clan becomes a teacher in a difficult high school and is assigned a class of delinquents, the 3-D. She will teach them mathematics, while gradually getting involved in several other levels, going so far as to get her students out of a bad situation by sometimes using her skills as heir to the clan.
  • My Boss My Hero: Film stock (2001), drama (2002). A young gang leader, who seems to be too stupid to do his job, misses a big deal because he cannot count correctly, and on the other hand, is practically illiterate. In order to access the succession of the clan, his father then forces him to return to high school, to obtain his diploma. He must not reveal his membership in the yakuza, under penalty of being immediately excluded.
  • Twittering Birds Never Fly: manga of the shōnen-ai genre (2011–?). Yashiro, a totally depraved masochist, boss of a yakuza clan and the Shinsei finance company, hires Chikara Dômeki, a secretive and not very talkative man, as his bodyguard. While Yashiro would like to take advantage of Dômeki's body, the latter is helpless.
  • Like the Beast: manga, yaoi (2008). Tomoharu Ueda, a police officer in a small local post, meets Aki Gotôda, son of the leader of a yakuza clan, in pursuit of an underwear thief. The next morning, Aki shows up at his house to thank him for his help and finds himself making a declaration of love for him. Taken aback, Ueda replies that it is better that they get to know each other, but that's without counting Aki's stubbornness, ready to do anything to achieve his ends.
  • Odd Taxi: anime, manga (2021). A taxi driver becomes entangled in the rivalry of competing kobun and uses his position to undermine the local yakuza organization.

Several manga by Ryoichi Ikegami are located in the middle of the Japanese underworld:

  • Sanctuary (1990): Hôjô and Asami, childhood friends, have only one goal: to give the Japanese back a taste of life, and to shake up the country. For this, they decide to climb the ladder of power, one in the light, as a politician, the other in the shadows, as yakuza.
  • Heat (1999): Tatsumi Karasawa is the owner of a club in Tokyo who plans to expand his business. He gives a hard time not only to the police but also to the yakuza, of which he manages, however, to rally a certain number at his side.
  • Nisekoi (2014): Nisekoi follows high school students Raku Ichijo, the son of a leader in the yakuza faction Shuei-gumi, and Chitoge Kirisaki, the daughter of a boss in a rival gang known as Muchi-Konkai.

Yakuza-related terminology

English Japanese Rōmaji
association/society -kai
behind-the-scenes fixer, godfather, or power broker (lit. "black curtain") kuromaku
boss (lit. "parent role") oyabun
gambler bakuto
gang/company -gumi
hoodlum/ruffian gurentai
loan sharks (lit. "salary man financiers") sarakin
motorcycle gang bōsōzoku
nightclubs, bars, restaurants, etc. (lit. "water business") mizu shōbai
outcasts (by birth) burakumin
peddlers, street stall operators tekiya
ritual cutting of the joint of the little finger to atone for a mistake yubitsume
ritual sharing of sake to form a binding relationship; rooted in Shinto tradition sakazuki
underling (lit. "child role") kobun
violence group bōryokudan

See also

Portal:

References

  1. "Japanese Organised Crime in Australia".
  2. ^ "Organized Crime Situation 2023" (PDF). National Police Agency. pp. 2–6, 26. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 March 2024. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  3. "Britannica Academic". academic.eb.com. Retrieved 1 July 2024.
  4. Bosmia, Anand N.; Griessenauer, Christoph J.; Tubbs, R. Shane (2014). "Yubitsume: ritualistic self-amputation of proximal digits among the Yakuza". Journal of Injury and Violence Research. 6 (2): 54–56. doi:10.5249/jivr.v6i2.489. PMC 4009169. PMID 24284812.
  5. "Feeling the Heat; The Yakuza". The Economist. Vol. 390, no. 8620. 28 February 2009. Gale A194486438.
  6. ^ 第4章 暴力団総合対策の推進. National Police Agency. 1999.
  7. Hill, Peter (February 2004). "The Changing Face of the Yakuza". Global Crime. 6 (1): 97–116. doi:10.1080/1744057042000297007. S2CID 153495517.
  8. 暴力団勢力、2万2400人 18年連続減少 組員、平均年齢上昇. The Asahi Shimbun. 27 March 2023.
  9. ^ Shikata, Ko (October 2006). "Yakuza – organized crime in Japan". Journal of Money Laundering Control. 9 (4): 416–421. doi:10.1108/13685200610707653. ProQuest 235850419.
  10. Hessler, Peter (2 January 2012). "All Due Respect". The New Yorker. Retrieved 19 April 2022. The name refers to an unlucky hand at cards—yakuza means "eight-nine-three"—and bluffing has always been part of the image. Many gangsters are Korean-Japanese or members of other minority groups that traditionally have been scorned.
  11. "Yakuza" definition. Kotobank (in Japanese)
  12. Dubro, A.; Kaplan, David E. (1986). Yakuza: The Explosive Account of Japan's Criminal Underworld. Da Capo Press. pp. 18–21. ISBN 978-0-201-11151-4.
  13. Joy, Alicia. "A Brief History of the Yakuza Organization". Culture Trip. Last modified 31 October 2016. https://theculturetrip.com/asia/japan/articles/a-brief-history-of-the-yakuza-organization/ Archived 1 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine.
  14. ^ Raz, Jacob. "Insider Outsider: The Way of the Yakuza." Kyoto Journal. Last modified 17 April 2011. https://kyotojournal.org/society/insider-outsider/.
  15. Dubro, A.; Kaplan, David E. (1986). Yakuza: The Explosive Account of Japan's Criminal Underworld. Da Capo Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-201-11151-4.
  16. Kaplan, David E.; Dubro, Alec (2012). Yakuza: Japan's Criminal Underworld (25th Anniversary ed.). the University of California Press. ISBN 978-0520215627.
  17. "Portraits of Modern Japanese Historical Figures". National Diet Library, Japan. 22 May 2007. Archived from the original on 22 July 2019.
  18. Johnson, David T. (2002). The Japanese way of justice: prosecuting crime in Japan. Oxford  ; New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195119862.
  19. Baradel, Martina (2 January 2021). "Yakuza Grey: The Shrinking of the Il/legal Nexus and its Repercussions on Japanese Organised Crime". Global Crime. 22 (1): 74–91. doi:10.1080/17440572.2020.1813114. ISSN 1744-0572.
  20. Siniawer, E. M. (1 March 2012). "Befitting Bedfellows: Yakuza and the State in Modern Japan". Journal of Social History. 45 (3): 623–641. doi:10.1093/jsh/shr120. ISSN 0022-4529.
  21. High concentration of, Yakuza within Fukuoka (20 February 2018). "Fukuoka to offer financial help for gangsters trying to leave crime syndicates". www.japantimes.co.jp. Retrieved 30 August 2022.
  22. ^ Bruno, Anthony. "The Yakuza – Oyabun-Kobun, Father-Child". truTV. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  23. 第2節 暴力団の構造と活動 (in Japanese). National police Agency. Archived from the original on 8 July 2023. Retrieved 12 May 2024.
  24. 開拓した会社がヤクザのフロント企業だったら (in Japanese). President Online. 19 June 2013. Archived from the original on 26 October 2021. Retrieved 12 May 2024.
  25. 駅に初詣、出所…山口組司忍組長ら暴力団が報道写真に納まるワケ (in Japanese). kodansha. 2 July 2022. Archived from the original on 12 May 2024. Retrieved 12 May 2024.
  26. 第2節 暴力団の構造と活動 (in Japanese). National police Agency. Archived from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 12 May 2024.
  27. ^ 【続・山口組分裂の深層】ヤクザ組織を支える「直参制度」 若頭、舎弟が意味するものとは (1/2ページ) (in Japanese). Sankei Shimbun. Archived from the original on 12 May 2024. Retrieved 12 May 2024.
  28. ^ 暴力団ミニ講座 8)兄弟盃 松江地区建設業暴力追放対策協議会
  29. 「やっぱり殺られてしもうたか…」 神戸山口組幹部・死へのカウントダウン (in Japanese). Bungeishunju. 27 October 2020. Archived from the original on 28 May 2022. Retrieved 12 May 2024.
  30. ^ 【六代目山口組の餅つきに密着】参加者は「PCR検査必須」、会場はさながら高級ブランドのファッションショー、高山若頭は50万超のフランス製ダウンジャケット (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Archived from the original on 11 April 2024. Retrieved 12 May 2024.
  31. ヤクザの役職・階級一覧|組織図や年収、序列を明解に解説 (in Japanese). Shokugyou datebase. Archived from the original on 3 April 2024. Retrieved 12 May 2024.
  32. ^ "The Yakuza: Inside Japan's murky criminal underworld". CNN.
  33. Japanorama, BBC Three, Series 2, Episode 3, first aired 21 September 2006
  34. ^ "「億単位のカネが簡単に集まった」暴対法から約30年…指定暴力団の幹部が明かす「バブル時代の暴力団のヤバすぎる実態」". Kodansha. 30 March 2023. Archived from the original on 28 May 2023. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  35. ^ "30年で構成員7割減…令和時代 暴力団はいま". NHK. Archived from the original on 30 June 2022. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  36. "Police of Japan 2011, Criminal Investigation : 2. Fight Against Organized Crime" Archived 10 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine, December 2009, National Police Agency
  37. "Act on Prevention of Unjust Acts by Organized Crime Group Members" Archived 19 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine, The Fukuoka Prefectural Center for the Elimination of Boryokudan (in Japanese)
  38. "Boryokudan Comprehensive Measures – The Condition of the Boryokudan", December 2010, Hokkaido Prefectural Police (in Japanese)
  39. ^ Reilly, Edward (1 January 2014). "Criminalizing Yakuza Membership: A Comparative Study of the Anti-Boryokudan Law". Washington University Global Studies Law Review. 13 (4): 801–829. Gale A418089219.
  40. 工藤会と"91人の証言者" 暴力団トップ死刑判決の内幕. NHK. 5 October 2021
  41. 六代目山口組髙山清司若頭、住吉会&稲川会トップと"ヤクザサミット"開催 緊張感漂う内部写真公開. Yahoo Japan News. 13 April 2023
  42. Britannica, Encyclopedia. "Taoka Kazuo, Japanese crime boss". www.britannica.com. The editors of Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
  43. ^ 暴力団、資金源を特殊詐欺にシフト 14年の摘発2337人と最多 (in Japanese). The Nikkei. 12 March 2015. Archived from the original on 15 March 2015. Retrieved 10 May 2024.
  44. 暴力団の主たる資金源「特殊詐欺」にオドロキ判決 背景に「警察」「民暴弁護士」の活躍 (in Japanese). Shinchosha. 18 October 2020. Archived from the original on 20 October 2020. Retrieved 10 May 2024.
  45. 特殊詐欺に暴力団関与 「主犯」の半数 組織の資金源か 警察庁まとめ (in Japanese). Mainichi Shimbun. 28 March 2019. Archived from the original on 28 March 2019. Retrieved 10 May 2024.
  46. Vorobyov, Niko (2019) Dopeworld. Hodder, UK. p. 91–93
  47. Stimulants Control Act (in Japanese). Ministry of Justice, Japan. Archived from the original on 14 December 2023. Retrieved 10 May 2024.
  48. "HumanTrafficking.org, "Human Trafficking in Japan"". Archived from the original on 15 November 2011. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  49. "The Yakuza, the Japanese Mafia – The Crime Library – Crime Library on truTV.com".
  50. "Organized Crime Situation 2023" (PDF). National Police Agency. p. 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 March 2024. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  51. "US clamps down on Japanese Yakuza mafia". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022.
  52. Kaplan, David E.; Dubro, Alec (2012). Yakuza: Japan's Criminal Underworld. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-27490-7.
  53. ^ Jake Adelstein. This Mob Is Big in Japan, The Washington Post, 11 May 2008
  54. "The Yakuza Lobby". Foreign Policy.
  55. Sterngold, James (22 January 1995), "Quake in Japan: Gangsters; Gang in Kobe Organizes Aid for People in Quake", The New York Times.
  56. Sawada, Yasuyuki; Shimizutani, Satoshi (March 2008). "How Do People Cope with Natural Disasters? Evidence from the Great Hanshin-Awaji (Kobe) Earthquake in 1995". Journal of Money, Credit and Banking. 40 (2–3): 463–488. doi:10.1111/j.1538-4616.2008.00122.x.
  57. ^ Adelstein, Jake (18 March 2011). "Japanese Yakuza Aid Earthquake Relief Efforts". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 8 July 2021.
  58. "La mafia japonesa de los 'yakuza' envía alimentos a las víctimas del sismo". CNN México (in Spanish). 25 March 2011. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  59. ^ Yakuza Archived 11 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Crimelibrary.com
  60. Kaplan, David E.; Dubro, Alec (2003). Yakuza: Japan's Criminal Underworld. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-21562-7.
  61. Bouissou, Jean-Marie (1999). "Le marché des services criminels au Japon. Les yakuzas et l'État" [The criminal services market in Japan. The Yakuza and the State] (PDF). Critique Internationale (in French). 3 (1): 155–174. doi:10.3406/criti.1999.1602.
  62. Jean-François Gayraud, Le Monde des mafias, édition 2008, p. 104
  63. Yakuza returns after five years in North Korea jail on drug charge 2009-01-16 The Japan Times
  64. Ronald Philip Dore (8 March 2015). Aspects of Social Change in Modern Japan. Princeton University Press. p. 308. ISBN 978-1-4008-7206-0.
  65. Luis Frois SJ (14 March 2014). The First European Description of Japan, 1585: A Critical English-Language Edition of Striking Contrasts in the Customs of Europe and Japan by Luis Frois, S.J. Routledge. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-317-91781-6.
  66. "Mitsuhiro Suganuma, "Japan's Intelligence Services"". The Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan. Archived from the original on 30 March 2012. Retrieved 3 October 2011.
  67. "Capital punishment – Japan's Yakuza Vie for Control of Tokyo" (PDF). Jane's Intelligence Review: 4. December 2009. Around 60% of yakuza members come from burakumin, the descendants of a feudal outcast class, according to a 2006 speech by Mitsuhiro Suganuma, a former officer of the Public Security Intelligence Agency. He also said that approximately 30% of yakuza are Japanese-born Koreans, and only 10% are from non-burakumin Japanese and Chinese ethnic groups.
  68. Dubro, A.; Kaplan, David E. (1986). Yakuza: The Explosive Account of Japan's Criminal Underworld. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-201-11151-4.
  69. ^ Kaplan, David E.; Dubro, Alec (2003). Yakuza: Japan's Criminal Underworld. University of California Press. p. 133. ISBN 978-0-520-21562-7.
  70. Kristof, Nicholas D. (30 November 1995). "Japan's Invisible Minority: Better Off Than in Past, but StillOutcasts". The New York Times.
  71. (in Japanese) "Boryokudan Situation in the Early 2007", National Police Agency, 2007, p. 22. See also Bōryokudan#Designated bōryokudan.
  72. Kaplan and Dubro (2003) Preface to the new edition.
  73. Bruno, A. (2007). The Yakuza, the Japanese Mafia. CrimeLibrary: Time Warner
  74. "White Paper on Crime 1989 3 頂上作戦とその影響(昭和30年代末~40年代前半)". Ministry of Justice (Japan). Archived from the original on 31 July 2023. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  75. "White Paper on Crime 1989 4 広域化・寡占化による再編の時代(昭和40年代後半~50年代前半)". Ministry of Justice (Japan). Archived from the original on 31 July 2023. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  76. "暴力的要求行為の禁止内容". National Center for Removal of Criminal Organizations. Archived from the original on 4 December 2023. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  77. ^ "21st-Century Yakuza: Recent Trends in Organized Crime in Japan ~Part 1 21 ――". The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus. Retrieved 1 April 2022.
  78. ^ Zeller, Frank (AFP-Jiji), "Yakuza served notice days of looking the other way are over," Japan Times, 26 January 2011, p. 3.
  79. ^ "「早くやめておけば」あえぐ組員、強まる排除 「暴排」条例の10年". The Asahi Shimbun. 30 September 2021. Archived from the original on 3 December 2023. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  80. Botting, Geoff, "Average Joe could be collateral damage in war against yakuza", Japan Times, 16 October 2011, p. 9.
  81. Schreiber, Mark, "Anti-Yakuza Laws are Taking their Toll", Japan Times, 4 March 2012, p. 9.
  82. ^ "元暴5年条項とは?定義や反社会的勢力排除に必要な理由を解説". Socialwire Co., Ltd. 28 March 2023. Archived from the original on 25 January 2024. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  83. ^ "暴力団から足を洗って5年以上なのに、どうして銀行口座つくれないの? 元組員が「不合理な差別」と提訴". Tokyo Shimbun. Archived from the original on 3 July 2023. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  84. "Yakuza Bosses Whacked by Regulators Freezing AmEx Cards". Bloomberg.
  85. "住吉会トップら6億円超支払う 詐欺被害上回る和解金". The Asahi Shimbun. 19 June 2021. Archived from the original on 29 September 2022. Retrieved 11 May 2024.
  86. RJ Endra (24 August 2021). "Yakuza boss is first ever to be sentenced to death in Japan". The Japan Story. Archived from the original on 25 August 2021.
  87. "捜査幹部「画期的な判決」 他の暴力団に影響も". Sankei Shimbun. 24 August 2021. Archived from the original on 19 October 2021. Retrieved 11 May 2024.
  88. "Japanese high court overturns death sentence against yakuza gang leader". NHK. 12 March 2024. Retrieved 12 March 2024.
  89. "Citizens battle Kudo-kai yakuza gang to take back their streets | The Asahi Shimbun: Breaking News, Japan News and Analysis". The Asahi Shimbun. Retrieved 1 April 2022.
  90. "The Yakuza's Impact On Japanese Society | ipl.org". www.ipl.org. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
  91. Martin, Alexander (30 November 1999). "5 Things to Know About Japan's Yakuza". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  92. Gragert, Lt. Bruce (25 August 2010). "Yakuza: The Warlords of Japanese Organized Crime". Annual Survey of International & Comparative Law. 4 (1). Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  93. "Where Have Japan's Yakuza Gone?". Daily Beast.
  94. "Yakuza: Kind-hearted criminals or monsters in suits?". Japan Today. 10 October 2012. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  95. "Reposted: The high price of writing about anti-social forces – and those who pay. 猪狩先生を弔う日々 : Japan Subculture Research Center". japansubculture.com. 9 January 2015. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
  96. "Serie –Twittering birds never fly". taifu-comics.com. Retrieved 10 October 2015.

Bibliography

External links

Organized crime groups in Asia
China, Hong Kong, and Macau
India
Indonesia
Israel
Japan
Lebanon
Malaysia
Pakistan
Philippines
Post-Soviet states
Singapore
South Korea
Taiwan
Thailand
Turkey
Vietnam
Organized crime groups in the Americas
Argentina
Bolivia
Brazil
CanadaSee: Organized crime groups in Canada
Caribbean
Colombia
El Salvador
Mexico
United StatesSee: Organized crime groups in the United States
Venezuela
Categories: